This also demonstrates that the for variable is an alias, and not a copy:
my $foo = "foo"; for my $bar ($foo) { print "foo: $foo, ", \$foo, "\n"; print "bar: $bar, ", \$bar, "\n"; $bar = "bar"; print "foo: $foo, ", \$foo, "\n"; print "bar: $bar, ", \$bar, "\n"; } print "foo: $foo, ", \$foo, "\n"; __OUTPUT__ foo: foo, SCALAR(0x18245f0) bar: foo, SCALAR(0x18245f0) foo: bar, SCALAR(0x18245f0) bar: bar, SCALAR(0x18245f0) foo: bar, SCALAR(0x18245f0) __END__

-QM
--
Quantum Mechanics: The dreams stuff is made of


In reply to Re^2: Finally, C by QM
in thread Finally, C by Ido

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