There is another Reason, which hasn' come up before: When I want to write a program that is a shell script and a perl script too (,and a python script and c-shell ... you get the picture)(yes I have done it. 6 languages last I counted) you want to have the possibility to use a variable before declaration because the declaration would be an invalid command in the other language.

Why I would do this? I like database-definition files. Executed by sh they create a database. Required they give a connection to that database. Or what about a maintainancescript that works whatever interpreter is installed?


In reply to Re: Why isn't C<use strict> the default? by Anonymous Monk
in thread Why isn't C<use strict> the default? by BrowserUk

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