Only if you use for (my $i; ... ) the variable has the old value again.

$i = 3; for (my $i = 0; $i < 30; $i++) { # \ # do something here # | scope of inner $i variable } # / print $i, "\n"; # prints 3 because it's the outer variable again

Regarding your second question, that's really a matter of preference and learning. If you plan to do more with perl, it will pay off to learn common Perl idioms, and use them.

If you have access to a public library, I'd very much recommend the book Programming Perl by Wall, Christiansen and Orwant

Perl 6 - links to (nearly) everything that is Perl 6.

In reply to Re^4: Useless use of private variable in void context by moritz
in thread Useless use of private variable in void context by okarmi

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