Hi monks,
Maybe I'm used to Perl in respect to $ for scalars, @ for arrays and % for hashes.
I'm reading up on PHP and I come across code such as:
while($element = each ($fruit)) {
echo $element['key'];
echo '-';
echo $element['value'];
echo '<br />';
}
which is equivalent to Perl's
while (($key, $value) = each (%fruit) {
print $key;
print '-';
priint $value;
print '<br />';
}
When I read Perl code, the % immediately tells me that I'm looking an associative array. In contrast, all variables in PHP are prefixed with $, which I find rather unhelpful.
If I'm not wrong, Ruby has none of those and I imagine that it must be a lot more cryptic, because the variables can read like function words:
for x in 0...c.length do print c[x], " " end
Which are the variables and which are the function words?
What are your views?
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