I'd first think to try the following, but that may be perl6 interpolation talking:

my $index = \&login; for (keys %{$_[0]}) { print qq[<TD WIDTH="$table_vars{$_}">\n$index->()\n</TD>\n]; }

Generally, and definitely perl5, "@{[foo()]}" calls &foo as list context and interpolates the return value as with an array and "${\foo()]}" similarly, with scalar context and as a scalar.

For your particular example, however, I'd just use printf.

for (keys %{$_[0]}) { printf qq[<TD WIDTH="$table_vars{$_}"\n%s</TD>\n], $index->(); }

There is no need to escape quoting delimeters in Perl.


In reply to Re^2: How do you run a subroutine from inside HTML code? by Anonymous Monk
in thread How do you run a subroutine from inside HTML code? by coldmiser

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