Maybe you can use "use warnings;" for this ... Best regards Christian
Am 10.01.11 13:49 schrieb "Sunita Rani Pradhan" unter <sunita.prad...@altair.com>: >We have -w option for warnings which we specify with the 1st line . How >does it work on windows ? > >-Sunita > >-----Original Message----- >From: Donald Calloway [mailto:donald.callo...@gmail.com] >Sent: Sunday, January 09, 2011 6:42 PM >To: beginners@perl.org >Subject: Re: 1st line of perl script > >I think there is no error thrown by Windows (or any other architecture) > >because this line is never compiled because of the # in front which >signifies the line as comments. > >On Tue, 04 Jan 2011 00:33:18 -0500, Sunita Rani Pradhan ><sunita.prad...@altair.com> wrote: > >> Hi All >> >> >> Perl script works without the first line ( perl >Interpreter >> : #! /usr/bin/perl) . What is the real use of this line ? This line >does >> not through any error on Windows where , this path does not exist . >> >> Why is it so ? >> >> >> Could anybody explain it clearly? >> >> >> Thanks >> >> Sunita >> > > >-- >Using Opera's revolutionary email client: http://www.opera.com/mail/ > >-- >To unsubscribe, e-mail: beginners-unsubscr...@perl.org >For additional commands, e-mail: beginners-h...@perl.org >http://learn.perl.org/ > > > >-- >To unsubscribe, e-mail: beginners-unsubscr...@perl.org >For additional commands, e-mail: beginners-h...@perl.org >http://learn.perl.org/ > > -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: beginners-unsubscr...@perl.org For additional commands, e-mail: beginners-h...@perl.org http://learn.perl.org/