In perl 4, before there where references, symbolic refereces where needed to make multi-dimintional arrays and hashes.
Now that perl has references there are very few reasons to use these.
our $reference = "global";
{
my $reference = "local";
print "reference equals ${reference}, ";
print "symbolic reference equals ${'reference'}.\n";
}
print "Here ${reference} and ${'reference'} both come out of the sysbo
+l table.\n";
print "This also shows how local differs from local\n";
{
local $reference = "local";
print "reference equals ${reference}, ";
print "symbolic reference equals ${'reference'}.\n";
}
I don't know if this makes symbolic references clearer for you, but it did for me. Thanks for the question.
-- gam3
A picture is worth a thousand words, but takes 200K.
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