Consider

sub foo { my $x=shift; $x="Changed1"; $_[0]="Changed2"; } my $i="Orig1"; my $j="Orig2"; print "$i,$j\n"; foo($i,$j); print "$i,$j\n"; __END__ Orig1,Orig2 Orig1,Changed2

Assigning to $_[$x] is the same as assigning to the original value that was passed into the subroutine. This is because its an alias. Its not a copy. IOW, its where two or more variable names refer to the same memory location. Its much as if you did

sub bar { my $ref=shift; $$ref='changed' } bar(\$j);

Except you dont have to deref before you do the assignment.

for() aliases, as does map, and a few other places where it can be useful to have this behaviour.

---
$world=~s/war/peace/g


In reply to Re^5: Small troubles with references (aliases) by demerphq
in thread Small troubles with references by coldmiser

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