It is not possible to know the variable name of the variable passed into the subroutine, you need to tell it the name of the varaibles.

Just a minor modification to your code will make it work - just pass in the variable name in csv format.
#!/usr/bin/perl use strict; use warnings; sub defnz { my @names = split /,/, shift; my %vars; @vars{@names} = @_; for my $item (@names) { if (!defined($vars{$item})) { print STDERR "$item is not defined\n"; return; } elsif ($vars{$item} eq '') { print STDERR "$item is empty\n"; return; } } print STDOUT "All scalars defined and non-empty\n"; return 1; # all items in list defined and non-empty } my ($foo,$bar,$baz) = ("FOO","BAR","BAZ"); defnz('$foo,$bar,$baz', $foo,$bar,$baz); ($foo,$bar,$baz) = ("FOO","BAR",""); defnz('$foo,$bar,$baz', $foo,$bar,$baz); ($foo,$bar,$baz) = ("FOO",undef,""); defnz('$foo,$bar,$baz', $foo,$bar,$baz); __END__ output is: All scalars defined and non-empty $baz is empty $bar is not defined
Simpler still, you can use Data::Dumper to inspect the variables.
#!/usr/bin/perl use strict; use warnings; use Data::Dumper; sub defnz { my @names = split /,/, shift; my %vars; @vars{@names} = @_; for my $item (@names) { if (!defined($vars{$item}) || $vars{$item} eq '') { print STDERR Dumper(\%vars); return; } } print STDOUT "All scalars defined and non-empty\n"; return 1; # all items in list defined and non-empty } my ($foo,$bar,$baz) = ("FOO","BAR","BAZ"); defnz('$foo,$bar,$baz', $foo,$bar,$baz); ($foo,$bar,$baz) = ("FOO","BAR",""); defnz('$foo,$bar,$baz', $foo,$bar,$baz); ($foo,$bar,$baz) = ("FOO",undef,""); defnz('$foo,$bar,$baz', $foo,$bar,$baz); __END__ output: All scalars defined and non-empty $VAR1 = { '$foo' => 'FOO', '$baz' => '', '$bar' => 'BAR' }; $VAR1 = { '$foo' => 'FOO', '$baz' => '', '$bar' => undef };

In reply to Re: Access variable names by Roger
in thread Access variable names by andreas1234567

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