> My first clue that something is amiss is in your third line of code when the > return skips "AA" and starts "AB, AC, AD....". That suggests to me that the > two step assign/printf call is playing havoc with the $ anonymous variable
Missed that about the missing AA - does the same thing with a named var, though: raku -e 'for <AA NN> -> $alpha { for (1..14) { (state $sv = $alpha)++; printf("d: %s\n", $sv ) } }' d: AB d: AC So raku -e 'for <AA NN> -> $alpha { for (1..14) { say (state $sv = $alpha)++; printf("d: %s\n", $sv ) } }' AA d: AB AB d: AC Ah, the increment happens the initial assignment. $sv = "AA"; $sv++; print $sv; # AB but the say (state $sv = $alpha)++ says the result of the assignment, then the increment. My confusion was more about my inability to use "$" anywhere else. raku -e 'for <AA NN> -> $alpha { for (1..14) { say (state $ = $alpha)++; printf("d: %s\n", $ ) } }' AA Use of uninitialized value of type Any in string context. Methods .^name, .raku, .gist, or .say can be used to stringify it to something meaningful. in block at -e line 1 Use of uninitialized value of type Any in string context. Methods .^name, .raku, .gist, or .say can be used to stringify it to something meaningful. in any join at gen/moar/stage2/NQPCORE.setting line 1075 d: AB Use of uninitialized value of type Any in string context. ... break it out of the parens, and it loses some "stateness": raku -e 'for <AA NN> -> $alpha { for (1..14) { say state $ = $alpha; $++; printf("d: %s\n", $ ) } }' AA Use of uninitialized value of type Any in string context. Methods .^name, .raku, .gist, or .say can be used to stringify it to something meaningful. in block at -e line 1 ... AA but the named doesn't raku -e 'for <AA NN> -> $alpha { for (1..14) { state $sv = $alpha; say $sv; $sv++; printf("d: %s\n", $sv ) } }' AA d: AB AB d: AC ________________________________ From: William Michels <w...@caa.columbia.edu> Sent: Tuesday, September 1, 2020 5:30 PM To: Andy Bach <andy_b...@wiwb.uscourts.gov> Cc: yary <not....@gmail.com>; perl6-users <perl6-us...@perl.org> Subject: Re: print particular lines question My first clue that something is amiss is in your third line of code when the return skips "AA" and starts "AB, AC, AD....". That suggests to me that the two step assign/printf call is playing havoc with the $ anonymous variable. Try this instead: ~$ raku -e 'for <AA NN> -> $alpha { for (1..14) { printf("d: %s\n", (state $ = $alpha)++ ) }; };' d: AA d: AB d: AC d: AD d: AE d: AF d: AG d: AH d: AI d: AJ d: AK d: AL d: AM d: AN d: NN d: NO d: NP d: NQ d: NR d: NS d: NT d: NU d: NV d: NW d: NX d: NY d: NZ d: OA HTH, Bill. On Tue, Sep 1, 2020 at 2:57 PM Andy Bach <andy_b...@wiwb.uscourts.gov<mailto:andy_b...@wiwb.uscourts.gov>> wrote: I'm barely hanging on with the "$" so ... so from: raku -e 'for <AA NN> -> $alpha { for (1..14) { print (state $ = $alpha)++ ~ " " } }' AA AB AC AD AE AF I tried an actual, er, non-anon var # raku -e 'for <AA NN> -> $alpha { for (1..14) { print (state $sv = $alpha)++ ~ " " } }' AA AB AC AD AE AF ... and then I tried raku -e 'for <AA NN> -> $alpha { for (1..14) { (state $sv = $alpha)++; printf("d: %s\n", $sv ) } }' d: AB d: AC d: AD d: AE d: AF ... but back to "$" raku -e 'for <AA NN> -> $alpha { for (1..14) { (state $ = $alpha)++; printf("d: %s\n", $ ) } }' Use of uninitialized value of type Any in string context. Methods .^name, .raku, .gist, or .say can be used to stringify it to something meaningful. in block at -e line 1 Use of uninitialized value of type Any in string context. Methods .^name, .raku, .gist, or .say can be used to stringify it to something meaningful. in any join at gen/moar/stage2/NQPCORE.setting line 1075 d: [27 more times] I used printf hoping the %s context would stringify "$" as trying any of the suggested "methods" complain of a missing "self" raku -e 'for <AA NN> -> $alpha { for (1..14) { (state $ = $alpha)++; printf("d: %s\n", $.raku ) } }' ===SORRY!=== Error while compiling -e Variable $.raku used where no 'self' is available at -e:1 ------> v = $alpha)++; printf("d: %s\n", $.raku⏏ ) } } expecting any of: term So I'm missing something about "$", I think ________________________________ From: William Michels via perl6-users <perl6-us...@perl.org<mailto:perl6-us...@perl.org>> Sent: Tuesday, September 1, 2020 3:17 PM To: yary <not....@gmail.com<mailto:not....@gmail.com>> Cc: perl6-users <perl6-us...@perl.org<mailto:perl6-us...@perl.org>> Subject: Re: print particular lines question I tried combining Larry's code and Yary's code, variously using "state" or "INIT" or "BEGIN". This is what I saw: ~$ raku -e 'for <AA NN> -> $alpha { for (1..14) { print (state $ = $alpha)++ ~ " " } }' AA AB AC AD AE AF AG AH AI AJ AK AL AM AN NN NO NP NQ NR NS NT NU NV NW NX NY NZ OA ~$ raku -e 'for <AA NN> -> $alpha { for (1..14) { print (INIT $ = $alpha)++ ~ " " } }' 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 ~$ raku -e 'for <AA NN> -> $alpha { for (1..14) { print (BEGIN $ = $alpha)++ ~ " " } }' 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 Expected? --Bill. On Tue, Sep 1, 2020 at 11:44 AM yary <not....@gmail.com<mailto:not....@gmail.com>> wrote: > > > Thanks, that's cool, and shows me something I was wondering about > > On Tue, Sep 1, 2020 at 11:36 AM Larry Wall > <la...@wall.org<mailto:la...@wall.org>> wrote: >> >> If you want to re-initialize a state variable, it's probably better to make >> it explicit with the state declarator: >> >> $ raku -e "for <a b> { for (1..2) { say (state $ = 'AAA')++ } }" >> AAA >> AAB >> AAA >> AAB > > > $ raku -e 'for <AA OO> -> $alpha { for (1..3) { say (state $ = $alpha)++ } }' > AA > AB > AC > OO > OP > OQ >