Thanks for the info Curis.

I don't think I saw any answers from the more internal aware gurus out there and like 
Curtis, I would certainly like to know more about this.

TIA

At 14:32 2002.01.08, Curtis Poe wrote:
>--- Eric Beaudoin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> I was wondering if someone could explain why a variable define with a global scope 
>was slower
>> that one define within the local lexical scope when used in a loop?
>
>If I recall correctly, you should usually get better performance from lexically 
>scoped variables
>than from global ones.  Lexically scoped variables are stored in a private 
>"scratchpad" array and
>can be accessed directly by Perl.
>
>Globals, on the other hand, are stored in a public symbol table in a typeglob. Perl 
>has to do a
>hash lookup in the symbol table and then get the corresponding entry in the typeglob 
>for the
>variable you need.  No such lookup in necessary for lexicals, hence the better 
>performance.
>
>Any internals people around?   I'd love to hear some more knowledgeable people 
>/(?:correct|expand
>upon)/ this.
>
>Cheers,
>Curtis "Ovid" Poe
>
>=====
>"Ovid" on http://www.perlmonks.org/
>Someone asked me how to count to 10 in Perl:
>push@A,$_ for reverse q.e...q.n.;for(@A){$_=unpack(q|c|,$_);@a=split//;
>shift@a;shift@a if $a[$[]eq$[;$_=join q||,@a};print $_,$/for reverse @A
>
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Éric Beaudoin                <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


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