开发者

Are @{$list_ref} and @$list_ref equivalent in Perl?

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2022-12-14 02:38 出处:网络
I am new to Perl and am curious whether @{$list_ref} and @$list_ref are perfectly equivalent. T开发者_运维知识库hey seem to be interchangeable, but I am nervous that there is something subtle going o

I am new to Perl and am curious whether @{$list_ref} and @$list_ref are perfectly equivalent.

T开发者_运维知识库hey seem to be interchangeable, but I am nervous that there is something subtle going on that I may be missing.


Yes, they're equivalent. You need braces when the expression is more than a simple scalar variable, e.g.,

push @{ $foo{$bar} } => "baz";

For more detail, see the Using References section of the documentation on references. The standard Perl documentation also includes several tutorials on using references:

  • Understand References Today (mentioned by hobbs in the question's comments)
  • Manipulating Arrays of Arrays in Perl
  • Perl Data Structures Cookbook


I've always found it helpful to remember that the outer braces are not syntactical magic, they're just a block that returns a reference. The expression inside the block can be anything that returns a reference:

$ perl -le 'sub foo {[qw/ apple orange banana /]} print ${print "Do something here."; foo()} [1]'
Do something here.
orange
0

精彩评论

暂无评论...
验证码 换一张
取 消