I don't now what that example is trying to show, but let's expand:

perl -l *r = ["goose"]; *r = \"moose"; print ref \*r; print ${*r}; print @{*r}; __END__ GLOB moose goose

So you see, GLOB is a useful value in this case. In anycase - if ref() returns a true value, THAT means there is something to dereference here.

Just to make it clear: ref($r) returns "REF" if $r is a reference to a reference.

On the other hand, I agree that the REF return value just adds unnesessary complexity and returning SCALAR for a ref-to-a-ref would have been more consistent and simpler (just like an arrayref returns ARRAY, and doesn't care about the elements of the array).


In reply to Re^5: ref eq "REF" by Joost
in thread ref == "REF" by gaal

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