When used in a numeric context (like the above), $i
will automatically take on the value of 0. When used in
a string context, an undef value will take on the value of
the empty string.
However, I'm pretty sure that in some versions of
Perl you get "unitialized value" warnings (when -w
is turned on) when using an undef value in concatenation or in a numeric expression.
This is somewhat confirmed by this thread on clpm.
Also, note that if you have -w turned on, you'll get
an "unitialized value" warning when you compare $i
against 5 the first time through your while loop. See:
% perl -w
my $i;
while ($i<5) {
$i++;
}
<Ctrl-D>
Use of uninitialized value at - line 2.
Personally I find this rather annoying. :)
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