/--- On Fri, Aug 04, 2000 at 05:58:44PM +0100, Piers Cawley wrote:
| At 02:31 PM 8/4/00 +0200, dLux wrote:
| My suggestion is: declare "eval $scalar" as a bad guy.
| It's not just string eval. It's also do FILE and require.
| It's a powerful construct, though, and I wouldn't declare
Hello!
I am thinking about the perl compiler, and I thought if somebody
avoid using the "eval $scalar", the compiled code (perl to C
compiled code) may not contain a full perl interpreter. If it is the
case, we must say to any module developer: Don't use "eval $scalar"!
This
On Fri, Aug 04, 2000 at 12:24:01PM -0400, Dan Sugalski wrote:
At 02:31 PM 8/4/00 +0200, dLux wrote:
My suggestion is: declare "eval $scalar" as a bad guy.
It's not just string eval. It's also do FILE and require.
Which you need at runtime, even in compiled code, to run external
At 01:30 AM 8/5/00 +0900, Simon Cozens wrote:
On Fri, Aug 04, 2000 at 12:24:01PM -0400, Dan Sugalski wrote:
At 02:31 PM 8/4/00 +0200, dLux wrote:
My suggestion is: declare "eval $scalar" as a bad guy.
It's not just string eval. It's also do FILE and require.
Which you need at runtime,