Seriously Todd? "What is a digit?" The characters '0' to '9' are digits.
(Unicode probably has a whole lot of others, but those will do for the moment.)
On Mon, 11 Dec 2023, at 18:22, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users wrote:
> On 12/10/23 22:26, William Michels via perl6-users wrote:
> If I do not kn
my $x="abc45def";
my @y=; say so $x.contains(any @y);
"so" will collapse the junction into a Bool.
"say" will append a \n for you, so you don't have to.
> On 11 Dec 2023, at 01:52, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users
> wrote:
>
>>> On 10 Dec 2023, at 21:36, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users
>>> wrote:
>
"so" will collapse the junction into a Bool.
"say" will append a \n for you, so you don't have to.
On 11 Dec 2023, at 01:52, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users
wrote:
On 10 Dec 2023, at 21:36, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users
wrote:
Hi All,
my Str $x="abc3defg"; if $x.contains( "a" || "b" || "3
On 12/11/23 00:55, Kevin Pye wrote:
Seriously Todd? "What is a digit?" The characters '0' to '9' are digits.
(Unicode probably has a whole lot of others, but those will do for the
moment.)
Yes seriously. Does '9' have the ascii value of 57 or the
binary value of 9? Or do you mean a single c
> I have found that when using `say` for debugging, it has been known to print
> out the
> previous value of a variable and not the current value. `print` does not do
> this.
That would certainly be a surprise to me. I'd think I was misunderstanding my
program, rather than a bug in say.
_
On 12/11/23 13:39, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users wrote:
On 12/11/23 00:55, Kevin Pye wrote:
Seriously Todd? "What is a digit?" The characters '0' to '9' are digits.
(Unicode probably has a whole lot of others, but those will do for the
moment.)
Yes seriously. Does '9' have the ascii value of
On 12/11/23 14:47, Andy Bach wrote:
I have found that when using `say` for debugging, it has been known to print
out the
previous value of a variable and not the current value. `print` does not do
this.
That would certainly be a surprise to me. I'd think I was
misunderstanding my program,
> On Dec 10, 2023, at 23:22, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users
> wrote:
>
> On 12/10/23 22:26, William Michels via perl6-users wrote:
>
> Hi Bill,
> Yes it does help. I am slowly getting there.
>
> If I do not know the length of the sting and have to ask
> with .chars, is there a way to use a va
On 12/11/23 15:48, William Michels via perl6-users wrote:
On Dec 10, 2023, at 23:22, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users
wrote:
On 12/10/23 22:26, William Michels via perl6-users wrote:
Hi Bill,
Yes it does help. I am slowly getting there.
If I do not know the length of the sting and have to as
On 12/11/23 15:48, William Michels via perl6-users wrote:
On Dec 10, 2023, at 23:22, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users
wrote:
On 12/10/23 22:26, William Michels via perl6-users wrote:
Hi Bill,
Yes it does help. I am slowly getting there.
If I do not know the length of the sting and have to as
> On Dec 11, 2023, at 15:54, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users
> wrote:
>
> On 12/11/23 15:48, William Michels via perl6-users wrote:
>>> On Dec 10, 2023, at 23:22, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users
>>> wrote:
>>>
>
> Is there a list somewhere of all the shortcuts, such as "alnum"?
> --
https://do
On 12/11/23 16:11, William Michels via perl6-users wrote:
On Dec 11, 2023, at 15:54, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users
wrote:
On 12/11/23 15:48, William Michels via perl6-users wrote:
On Dec 10, 2023, at 23:22, ToddAndMargo via perl6-users
wrote:
Is there a list somewhere of all the shortc
This is from my keeper on "match". It is the Perl 5 way
of explaining things. It works really well for me.
How did I do?
To find a match of "any" of the following
my $x="abc2def"; say so $x.match( / ^ <+[0..9] + [a..z]> ** 7 $ / )
my $x="abc2def"; say so $x.match( / ^ <+[0..9] + [a..z]> **
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