This is probably just a minor nit, but thought I might learn something. My understanding is that there is very little difference (from the perl interpreter standpoint) between:
my %hash = ('a', 'b', 'c', 'd');
and
my %hash = ('a' => 'b', 'c'=> 'd');
Advantages I can think of for the first representation are:
- As long as you know that a list has an even number of elements, you can use it as a hash.
The advantages I can think of for the second representation are:
- The => reads better from a maintainability standpoint
- you don't have to quote the key. For example:
my %hash = (a=>'b', c=>'d');
Essentially => is syntactic sugar for ,.
Update. Missed a tic.
"Look, Shiny Things!" is not a better business strategy than compatibility and reuse.
OSUnderdog
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