In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Rob Dixon wrote: > Kevin Pfeiffer wrote: >> >> I would have thought that this would initialize my $indent variable to 2 >> (like setting an initial state for an object), but if I call "indent()" I >> get nothing back. :-( [...] > Well yes, it will, but only when you execute it. Take a look > at the program below. [...] > use strict; > use warnings; > > printf "%d %d %d\n", indent(1), indent(2), indent(3); > > { > my $indent = 2; > > sub indent { > my $increment = shift; > $indent += $increment if $increment; > return $indent; > } > } > > printf "%d %d %d\n", indent(1), indent(2), indent(3); > > ** OUTPUT ** > > 1 3 6 > 3 5 8
Hmmm, I guess I would have to move it up or add a "BEGIN" label. Txs, K. -- Kevin Pfeiffer -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]