Perhaps I'm too much of a C++ hacker, but I tend to use this capability heavily. Consider a Foo::Lock class which implements a lock on a Foo, where foo might be a file, database record, etc. Then, your methods inside Foo.pm can be made "safe" by code like:
sub do_something() { my $obj = shift @_; my $crit = new Foo::Lock( $obj ); $crit->lock(); # now do something in the critical section ... $obj->yada_yada(); return unless $obj->valid(); # now do some more stuff... $obj->yada_yada(); return( $result ); }
In this case, we don't have to free the Lock explicitly, because its DESTROY method does that automagically. And we are never left with a hard-to-track deadlock defect because our app took a fatal somewhere, leaving the Foo accidentally locked. On the other hand, if $crit were cleaned up soonest, we couldn't depend on the critical section being held for as long as we need it.

In reply to Re^2: Warning about unused lexical variables by papidave
in thread Warning about unused lexical variables by blazar

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