In C++ I would do something like this:
void some_func(const char *str, ...);
some_func("hi %s u r %d", "n00b", 420);
In PHP I would do like this:
function some_func()
{
$args = func_get_args();
}
some_func($holy, $moly, $guacomole开发者_运维知识库);
How do I do that in Perl?
sub wut {
# What goes here?
}
You would do:
sub wut {
my @args = @_;
...
}
Perl automatically populates the special @_
variable when you call a function. You can access it in multiple ways:
- directly, by simply using
@_
or individual elements within it as$_[0]
,$_[1]
, and so on - by assigning it to another array, as shown above
by assigning it to a list of scalars (or possibly a hash, or another array, or combinations thereof):
sub wut { my ( $arg1, $arg2, $arg3, @others ) = @_; ... }
Note that in this form you need to put the array @others
at the end, because if you put it in earlier, it'll slurp up all of the elements of @_
. In other words, this won't work:
sub wut {
my ( $arg1, @others, $arg2 ) = @_;
...
}
You can also use shift
to pull values off of @_
:
sub wut {
my $arg1 = shift;
my $arg2 = shift;
my @others = @_;
...
}
Note that shift
will automatically work on @_
if you don't supply it with an argument.
Edit: You can also use named arguments by using a hash or a hash reference. For example, if you called wut()
like:
wut($arg1, { option1 => 'hello', option2 => 'goodbye' });
...you could then do something like:
sub wut {
my $arg1 = shift;
my $opts = shift;
my $option1 = $opts->{option1} || "default";
my $option2 = $opts->{option2} || "default2";
...
}
This would be a good way to introduce named parameters into your functions, so that you can add parameters later and you don't have to worry about the order in which they're passed.
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