> Besides, named arguments will solve this (in fewer chars even :-)...
>
> $user = 'nwiger';
> sub whois ($user) {
> # ...
> }
>
> Damian
Great point. I'll "settle" for that (it's what I'm looking for anyways).
:-)
So will these be "automatically-my()ed"? Or will you have to say:
sub whois (my $user) {
# ...
}
This seems more consistent (but there's that dang my() again!) :-)
-Nate
- Re: RFC: lexical variables made default (revised) Nathan Wiger
- Re: RFC: lexical variables made default (revi... Glenn Linderman
- Re: RFC: lexical variables made default (... Nathan Wiger
- Re: RFC: lexical variables made defau... Jeremy Howard
- Re: RFC: lexical variables made ... Tom Christiansen
- Re: RFC: lexical variables m... Jeremy Howard
- Re: RFC: lexical variables made default (revi... Nathan Torkington
- Re: RFC: lexical variables made default (... Nathan Wiger
- Re: RFC: lexical variables made defau... Ariel Scolnicov
- Re: RFC: lexical variables made default (... Damian Conway
- Re: RFC: lexical variables made defau... Nathan Wiger
- Re: RFC: lexical variables made ... Johan Vromans
- Re: RFC: lexical variables m... Nathan Wiger
- Re: RFC: lexical variables m... Tom Christiansen
- Re: RFC: lexical variables made default (revi... J. David Blackstone
- Re: RFC: lexical variables made default (revi... Nick Ing-Simmons
- RE: RFC: lexical variables made default Ala Qumsieh
- Re: RFC: lexical variables made default John Porter
- Re: RFC: lexical variables made default Tom Christiansen
- Re: RFC: lexical variables made default John Porter
- Re: RFC: lexical variables made defau... Tom Christiansen
