At 01:08 PM 7/11/2002 -0700, Ashley Winters wrote:
>On Thursday 11 July 2002 11:47 am, Chip Salzenberg wrote:
> > According to Dan Sugalski:
> > > At 9:50 PM -0400 7/9/02, Chip Salzenberg wrote:
> > > >    3a. If so, how can one distinguish among the e.g. many C<my $foo>
> > > >        variables declared within the current function?
> > >
> > > One pad per block, rather than per sub.
> >
> > I just remembered why I thought that woundn't work:  BEGIN is a block.
> >
> >    my $x = 1;
> >    BEGIN { %MY::{'$y'} = \$x }
> >    print $y;
>
>Even worse, you should be able to modify lexicals even outside your scope.
>
>sub violate_me {
>     caller(1).MY{'$y'} := caller(1).MY{'$x'};    # hypothetical syntax
>}
>
>{
>     my $x = 1;
>     my $y;     # Might be able to BEGIN { violate_me() } instead
>     violate_me();
>     print $y;
>}

This reminds me why I don't use Perl4 'local' anymore.

And now we have even uglier ways to write poor code. :)

The only real use I can see of %MY is debugging. If people are going
to take handles to pads and modify lexicals in closures, continuations
and routines from the outside, it probably means that the item needs to
be a class.

And side effects like "I call you, you modify me invisibly...." seems
more like taking dangerous drugs than programming.

Yep, I warned you about calling that routine, now look what it did to
your brains.

-Melvin


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