You can use a reference to a anonymous sub inside your big subroutine.
For example, in this script the 'my' variables from the outer subroutine are visible inside $inner:
#!/usr/bin/perl print outer('John', qw/dog car home/), "\n"; sub outer { my $name = shift; my @items = @_; my $inner = sub { return "$name\'s $_[0] "; }; return map {$inner->($_)} @items; }
The example is quite silly, but i often use this technique to simplify code. It is useful, if $inner has no sense outside outer.

In reply to Re: Can a large subroutine be split in two (e.g. parent and child relationship)? by Ieronim
in thread Can a large subroutine be split in two (e.g. parent and child relationship)? by newbie00

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