The perhaps-even-lower-tech way to go is a "do" statement. Create a file in which you define all your vars (e.g., ".myapprc"):

$foo = "Foo"; @bar = qw/B a r/; %blah = ( b => 'l', a => 'h' );

Then, just "load it up" in your script:

#!/usr/bin/perl -w use strict; our($foo, @bar, %blah); do "xyzrc" or die "xyzrc: $!\n";

I use this quite a lot, usually with a little more error checking (see "perldoc -f do"), in CGI scripts that need to source external info (database/table names, etc.)


--
"Language shapes the way we think, and determines what we can think about."
-- B. L. Whorf

In reply to Re: Trying to create a common "variable library" by oko1
in thread Trying to create a common "variable library" by tbblake

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