You are confusing two concepts.

To concatenate strings is to combine two strings into one. The string concatenation operator is & in VB and . in Perl.

VB: var1 = "abc" & var2 Perl (Concatenation): $var1 = 'abc' . $var2 Perl (Interpolation): $var1 = "abc$var2"; Perl (Concatenation using join): $var1 = join('', 'abc', $var2);

In VB, all statements must be on the same line. The _ operator allows you to break a statement into multiple lines. This has nothing to do with string concatenation. Perl doesn't require a continuation operator. Instead, one must tell Perl where the statement ends using ;.

VB: var = func(var1, var2, var3) Perl: $var = func($var1, $var2, $var3); VB: var = func( _ var1, _ var2, _ var3 _ ) Perl: $var = func( $var1, $var2, $var3 );

Together:

VB: stmt = "SELECT *" & _ " FROM table" & _ " ORDER BY field" Perl: $stmt = "SELECT *" . " FROM table" . " ORDER BY field" Perl (Since SQL servers treats newlines as whitespace): $stmt = " SELECT * FROM table ORDER BY field ";

In reply to Re^3: Concatnate long statement by ikegami
in thread Concatnate long statement by phimtau123

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