On 11/24/18 2:51 PM, Dan Book wrote:
The shift function removes and returns the first argument fromĀ @_
(since there's no array passed for it to shift from) in a sub. It's
used this way because the first argument to these subs is the
invocant/object. You can replace it with $_[0] to get the
The shift function removes and returns the first argument from @_ (since
there's no array passed for it to shift from) in a sub. It's used this way
because the first argument to these subs is the invocant/object. You can
replace it with $_[0] to get the first argument without removing it. You
This probably a perl question so if I should ask elsewhere let me know...
In looking at the Mojo::Pg blog example and in recent addition of db
method to Mojo::Pg::PubSub I see use of shift->.
From Mojo::Pg::PubSub documentation:
# Reconnect immediately
On Sat, Nov 24, 2018 at 11:09 AM sri wrote:
> This might now be resolved with the 4.12 release.
>>
>
> https://metacpan.org/release/SRI/Mojo-Pg-4.12
>
Yay!! I'm so glad this didn't get deprecated!!
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>
> ... like in the blog example...
>
Forgot the link.
https://github.com/mojolicious/mojo-pg/tree/master/examples/blog
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>
> I have previously used lite based applications and am starting to get
> familiar with full applications. I have been struggling to understand
> how to implement Pg::PubSub across different parts of my application.
>
You don't implement anything. Just use Mojo::Pg like in the blog
>
> Please avoid using Mojo::Pg::PubSub for now. It is broken and on the
> verge of getting deprecated.
>
> https://github.com/mojolicious/mojo-pg/issues/50
>
> I've been meaning to do it two weeks ago, but members of the
> community have asked me to wait and give them a chance to fix it.
>