yeah u r right.
-
Get a bigger mailbox -- choose a size that fits your needs.
On Tuesday, September 3, 2002, at 08:26 , Andrew Metcalfe wrote:
[..]
> Once I understood what => and -> were doing, it all made perfect sense...
[..]
thanks for reminding those who have forgotten
that while "=>" may appear to be what in perl is ">="
{ greater than or equal } it is really a "thi
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Tuesday, September 03, 2002 9:27 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: general confusion...
>
>
> I am a beginner, so list members -- correct me if I'm wrong here, but I
> think that the mathematical symbols
I am a beginner, so list members -- correct me if I'm wrong here, but I
think that the mathematical symbols (<>=) will only work with variables
containing numbers. For strings, you have to use gt, lt, le, eq. Hope
this is helpful.
Shawn
Andrew Metcalfe wrote at Mon, 02 Sep 2002 20:28:43 +0200:
> I'm a MS and Java developer, trying to debug some perl code.
Perl is *very* different to Java.
Better start with a Perl tutorial.
Please look also first to the excellent answer of Jeff,
as I won't re-explain what Jeff already has done.
On Sep 2, Andrew Metcalfe said:
>I'm a MS and Java developer, trying to debug some perl code.
If you're not a Perl programmer, you'll probably have some difficulties.
>my $self = {
>LOCATION => {
>USERNAME => $options{user_field} || 'username',
>BILLING => $o