It's "just" another way to do it.
What's the point of writing anything you write one way, and not another way?
given is a syntactically nice way to to assign to my $_, which I happen to like. I don't see why it has to be connected to control flow. (Which is also the reason why the given/when construct is not spelled select/case in Perl: both given and when can be used independently).
The strength of the topic variable $_ is that you can use it without writing $_ explicitly. given takes this one step further and makes the assignment also implicit.
I also happen to like given because in Perl 6 you can call any method doit on $_ by writing .doit, the method doesn't have to be special for that in any way.
So when you write lots of method calls on the same object, you can save a typing this way:
# Perl 6 code here given $svg-canvas { .rect: x => 5, y => 5, height => 90, width => 190; .circle: cx => 100, cy => 50, r => 20, style => 'fill: black'; .text: 'Some caption', x => 20, y => 15; # etc. }
In reply to Re^4: style guidance
by moritz
in thread style guidance
by 7stud
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