I think many of these short variable names were chosen to
deal with the limits of interpreters on 1960s-ish machines.
At that time, some of the principles underlying Huffman encoding were in play.
Perl just adopted many of these names as part of its
mission. That Larry Wall chose to
preserve the distinctive nature of this namespace and keep its expansion
out of the spaces that would be commonly chosen for
user tasks seems to me to be one of the insightful decisions in Perl's design. That it continues with
${^Word} style names is good.
Be well,
rir
Update: very minor language cleanup
Update: reworked poor sentence: the struck out stuff. You can't expand an
ad hoc namespace because you're creating a new one. The underlined text replaces:
add most of his other
predefined variables into a namespace that ... words are
failing me a bit, but he kept the namespace distinctive
and
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