Darren Duncan wrote:
Assuming that all elements of $a and $b are themselves immutable to all
levels of recursion, === then does a full deep copy like eqv. If at any
level we get a mutable object, then at that point it turns into =:= (a
trivial case) and stops.
( 1, "2.0", 3 ) === ( 1,2,3 )
True or false?
More imprtantly, how do I tell perl what I mean? The best I can think of is:
[&&] (@a »==« @b)
Vs
[&&] (@a »eq« @b)
But this only works for nice flat structures. For arbitrary tree
structures, we probably need adverbs on a comparison op (I think Larry
mentioned this a few posts back) ... but if we're going with adverbs do
we really need 5 different base operators? Are all of the 5 so common
that it would be clumbersome to require adverbs for their behavior?
Also, when sorting things, maybe deep inequalities would be useful, too.