On 1/11/19 11:39 AM, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users wrote:
On 1/11/19 11:33 AM, JJ Merelo wrote:
I think you want $x, not $Ace.
Cheers
Yup. I am on fire today! :'(
Still can't get it figured out. :'( :'(
$ p6 'my $x="Ace"; my %Vendors=("acme" => { "ContactName" => "Larry",
"AccountNo" => 1234 }, "Ace" => { "ContactName" => "Mo", "AccountNo" =>
"A102" } ); say "%Vendors<$x><ContactName>" ~ "\t" ~
"%Vendors<$x><AccountNo>";'
Use of uninitialized value of type Any in string context.
$ p6 'my $x="Ace"; my %Vendors=("acme" => { "ContactName" => "Larry",
"AccountNo" => 1234 }, "Ace" => { "ContactName" => "Mo", "AccountNo" =>
"A102" } ); say "%Vendors<"$x"><ContactName>" ~ "\t" ~
"%Vendors<"$x"><AccountNo>";'
Use of uninitialized value of type Any in string context.
$ p6 'my $x="Ace"; my %Vendors=("acme" => { "ContactName" => "Larry",
"AccountNo" => 1234 }, "Ace" => { "ContactName" => "Mo", "AccountNo" =>
"A102" } ); say "%Vendors<{$x}><ContactName>" ~ "\t" ~
"%Vendors<{$x}><AccountNo>";'
Use of uninitialized value of type Any in string context.
$ p6 'my $x="Ace"; my %Vendors=("acme" => { "ContactName" => "Larry",
"AccountNo" => 1234 }, "Ace" => { "ContactName" => "Mo", "AccountNo" =>
"A102" } ); say "%Vendors<{"$x"}><ContactName>" ~ "\t" ~
"%Vendors<{"$x"}><AccountNo>";'
Use of uninitialized value of type Any in string context.
I can't win.
$ p6 'my $x="Ace"; my %Vendors=("acme" => { "ContactName" => "Larry",
"AccountNo" => 1234 }, "Ace" => { "ContactName" => "Mo", "AccountNo" =>
"A102" } ); say "%Vendors<<$x>><ContactName>" ~ "\t" ~
"%Vendors<<$x>><AccountNo>";'
===SORRY!===
Unable to parse expression in double quotes; couldn't find final '"'
(corresponding starter was at line 1)
at -e:1
------> >" ~ "\t" ~ "%Vendors<<$x>><AccountNo>";⏏<EOL>
expecting any of:
double quotes
postfix
Other potential difficulties:
Ambiguous use of >>; use » instead to mean hyper, or insert
whitespace before >> to mean a quote terminator (or use different
delimiters?)
at -e:1
------> 2" } ); say "%Vendors<<$x>><ContactName>⏏" ~ "\t" ~
"%Vendors<<$x>><AccountNo>";
Ambiguous use of >>; use » instead to mean hyper, or insert
whitespace before >> to mean a quote terminator (or use different
delimiters?)
at -e:1
------> me>" ~ "\t" ~ "%Vendors<<$x>><AccountNo>⏏";