Hello all, (david, sorry if you receive this several times, I've had a hard time with the email client).
Thank you all for your attention. I'll answer here for the three who wrote about this thread. The example David wrote is wonderful. I was missing ": shared". That was exactly what I wanted to do, but better than what I wrote :). My skills on Google must be disappearing, 'cause I didn't find it and really looked for it several times... > I want to have a class I won't instanciate Here I was badly trying to define a set of functions, procedures and attributes which you can use from anywhere in your program, and which are collected under a common class, but something you don't have to instanciate => which, in Perl, seems to be a namespace or package. An example could be a "Config class" which has methods like WriteConfig or ReadConfig -- like for reading .ini files, and it has no sense (for me) to instanciate such a class. My English is not very good and I can't manage to explain better :( Anyway, I think I have understood what should I do. About "use strict", I know and I use it in the actual program, but made a test-case quickly to write the email and I didn't check for this. I really prefer the way David wrote the global (shared) variable; I was messing all I have read about perl objects all around :( In any case, I will read and study perl-syntax because I see Perl is a powerful but non-trivial-to-write language... hehe. Thank you for your help. I'll read this list with attention :) Con fecha lunes, 29 de septiembre de 2003, 21:49:21, escribió: d> ... if i understand your question correctly, see if the d> following d> helps: ... -- Best regards, Fernando Najera -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]