In a message dated Tue, 24 Sep 2002, Jonathan Scott Duff writes:

> On Tue, Sep 24, 2002 at 11:14:04AM -0400, Aaron Sherman wrote:
> > Again, we're wading into the waters of over-simplification. Let's try:
> >
> >         sub foo1(){ my @foo=(1,2,3); return @foo; }
> >         sub foo2(){ my $foo = [1,2,3]; return $foo; }
> >         sub foo3(*@list) { print @list.length, "\n"; }
> >         @foo = (1,2,3);
> >         foo3(@foo, [1,2,3], foo2(), foo1());
> >
> > Ok, so what is the output? 12? 10? 8?
> >
> > More importantly, why? I could argue the case for each of the above
> > numbers, but I think 12 is the way it would be right now.
>
> Hrm.  I think it must be 8.  Since foo3() flattens it's parameters, we
> get this:
>
>       foo3(1, 2, 3, [1,2,3], [1,2,3], 1, 2, 3);
>
> and since the two [1,2,3] are scalar things, we have 8 scalar things
> in our list.  Splat doesn't "look inside" the thing it flattens AFAIK,
> so it doesn't flatten the two [1,2,3].

Yes, but would the lack of parens in

  foo3 @foo, [1,2,3], foo2, foo1;

change anything? (I think and hope not.)

Trey

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