What you've done is fine, but I'm posting to comment on the other advice you've
been given: use a state variable.
Unfortunately, non-scalar state variables are pretty much broken. Consider:
foo();
sub foo {
state @verbose = 1..10;
say shift @$verbose;
}
gives an Initialization of state variables in list context currently forbidden error.
However, there are work-arounds, such as:
foo();
foo();
foo();
sub foo {
state $verbose = [1..10];
say shift @$verbose;
}
__END__
1
2
3
Using diagnostics states that "Constructions such
as state (@a) = foo() will be supported in a future perl release".
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