On Thu, Oct 16, 2003 at 01:46:30AM +0100, Simon Cozens wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Larry Wall) writes:
> > But for the time being I'm tied to an IV pole
>
> We got rid of those; they're PMC poles now.
>
> Get well soon,
Ditto!
Dave.
--
Little fly, thy summer's play my thoughtless hand has
ter
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Larry Wall) writes:
> But for the time being I'm tied to an IV pole
We got rid of those; they're PMC poles now.
Get well soon,
Simon
--
"They laughed at Columbus, they laughed at Fulton, they laughed at the
Wright brothers. But they also laughed at Bozo the Clown."
";
: $block();
: print "End";
:
: That is, the block returns from a function that's not currently
: executing.
:
: Will the output be: a)
:
: Can't 'return' from closure Block
It can't in general be determined at compile time whether the dynamic
scope
Dan Sugalski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> At 11:55 PM +0100 10/3/03, Piers Cawley wrote:
>>Dan Sugalski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>
>>> On Thu, 2 Oct 2003, Mark A. Biggar wrote:
>>>
Austin Hastings wrote:
>>>
> But that imposes eval() pretty frequently. Better to provide
> s
At 11:55 PM +0100 10/3/03, Piers Cawley wrote:
Dan Sugalski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
On Thu, 2 Oct 2003, Mark A. Biggar wrote:
Austin Hastings wrote:
> But that imposes eval() pretty frequently. Better to provide
> some lower-level hackish way to agglutinate Blocks.
Isn't this one of the
Dan Sugalski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Thu, 2 Oct 2003, Mark A. Biggar wrote:
>
>> Austin Hastings wrote:
>
>> > But that imposes eval() pretty frequently. Better to provide
>> > some lower-level hackish way to agglutinate Blocks.
>>
>>
>> Isn't this one of the prime examples of why CPS is
On Thu, 2 Oct 2003, Mark A. Biggar wrote:
> Austin Hastings wrote:
> > But that imposes eval() pretty frequently. Better to provide
> > some lower-level hackish way to agglutinate Blocks.
>
>
> Isn't this one of the prime examples of why CPS is being use, it allows
> for Tail Recursion Optimizati
Austin Hastings wrote:
-Original Message-
From: Luke Palmer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, October 02, 2003 10:23 PM
To: Jeff Clites
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: The Block Returns
Jeff Clites writes:
Speaking to the practical side, I have written code
On Fri, 3 Oct 2003, Simon Cozens wrote:
> Dunno what .= would mean now . is method call. I'm sure someone will make it
> mean something. :)
I've been saying for some time now that .= should mean exactly what one would expect
it to mean, method call and assign the result, for code like
$str .= lc
On Fri, 3 Oct 2003, Simon Cozens wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Austin Hastings) writes:
> > eval($block) if defined $block;
>
> I prefer $block.compile.run to eval()
They're not quite equivalent -- I think eval's still wrapping a try/catch
around the call.
Simon Cozens writes:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Austin Hastings) writes:
> > Frankly, I think I'd rather see:
>
> Some nits:
>
> > macro atexit($code) is parsed(/{ * }/) {
>
> Probably just
>macro atexit($code) is parsed(//) {
>
> > $block .= $code;
> $block _= $code;
$block
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Austin Hastings) writes:
> Frankly, I think I'd rather see:
Some nits:
> macro atexit($code) is parsed(/{ * }/) {
Probably just
macro atexit($code) is parsed(//) {
> $block .= $code;
$block _= $code;
Dunno what .= would mean now . is method call. I'm sure som
Austin Hastings writes:
> > -Original Message-
> > From: Luke Palmer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >
> > But this is already supported, in its most powerful form:
> >
> > wrap &block: { call; other_stuff() }
>
> Hmm, no.
>
> That does a call, which presumes a return, which burns up
> w
> -Original Message-
> From: Luke Palmer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Thursday, October 02, 2003 10:23 PM
> To: Jeff Clites
> Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: The Block Returns
>
>
> Jeff Clites writes:
> > >Speaking t
Jeff Clites writes:
> >Speaking to the practical side, I have written code that has to
> >disentangle
> >itself from the failure of a complex startup sequence. I'd love to be
> >able
> >to build a dynamic exit sequence. (In fact, being able to do &block
> >.=
> >{ more_stuff(); }; is way up on m
Speaking to the practical side, I have written code that has to
disentangle
itself from the failure of a complex startup sequence. I'd love to be
able
to build a dynamic exit sequence. (In fact, being able to do &block
.=
{ more_stuff(); }; is way up on my list...)
I've wanted to do that sort of
de that returns from the foo()
> subroutine (the line that says "return $self") When that closure is
> then called ...
>
> > my $block = foo;
> > print "Main";
> > $block();
>
> ... foo() is no longer executing.
>
> &
self;
}
}
foo() returns a closure that contains code that returns from the foo()
subroutine (the line that says "return $self") When that closure is
then called ...
my $block = foo;
print "Main";
$block();
... foo() is no longer executing.
That is,
print "Block";
> return $self;
> }
> }
foo() returns a closure that contains code that returns from the foo()
subroutine (the line that says "return $self") When that closure is
then called ...
> my $block = foo;
> print "Main";
On Thu, Oct 02, 2003 at 04:15:06AM -0600, Luke Palmer wrote:
> And to clarify:
>
> sub indexof(Selector $which, [EMAIL PROTECTED]) {
> for zip(@data, 0...) -> $_, $index {
> when $which { return $index }
> }
> }
>
> Which actually creates a closure (well, in th
e return inside of it returns from indexof.
Which is actually very, very nice.
So the question is: What happens when indexof isn't on the call chain,
but that inner closure is?
Luke
> >print "Main";
> >$block();
> >print "End";
>
> >That is, the block returns from a function that's not currently
> >executing.
>
> Main
> Block
> End
>
> is my guess.
>
> /Stefan
print "Main";
> $block();
>print "End";
>That is, the block returns from a function that's not currently
>executing.
Main
Block
End
is my guess.
/Stefan
So, I must ask, what does this do:
sub foo() {
return my $self = {
print "Block";
return $self;
}
}
my $block = foo;
print "Main";
$block();
print "End";
That is, the block returns from a function
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