Larry Wall wrote:
On Fri, Dec 10, 2004 at 11:05:32AM -0500, Abhijit Mahabal wrote:
: Consider a class (e.g., the hypothetical Geometry::Triangle) that can
: have several attributes (side1, side2, side3, angle1, ang_bisector1,
: side_bisector, altitude1 and so forth), most of which will not be
:
On Fri, Dec 10, 2004 at 11:05:32AM -0500, Abhijit Mahabal wrote:
: Consider a class (e.g., the hypothetical Geometry::Triangle) that can
: have several attributes (side1, side2, side3, angle1, ang_bisector1,
: side_bisector, altitude1 and so forth), most of which will not be
: needed for most i
On Thu, Dec 16, 2004 at 10:42:35AM +0100, Michele Dondi wrote:
: On Wed, 15 Dec 2004, Abhijit Mahabal wrote:
:
: >#!/usr/bin/perl -e
: >$x = 1;
:
: Is this supposed to work? I would tend to consider it counter intuitive...
It occurred to me as I was dropping off to sleep last night that it
can't
On Wed, 15 Dec 2004, Abhijit Mahabal wrote:
#!/usr/bin/perl -e
$x = 1;
Is this supposed to work? I would tend to consider it counter intuitive...
#!/usr/bin/perl
v6; $x = 1;
Incidentally, and on a totally OT basis, I've noticed that Perl6 is
supposed to have v-strings. But (current) 'perldoc perld
David Storrs writes:
> On Dec 15, 2004, at 6:11 PM, Abhijit Mahabal wrote:
>
> > S01 says:
> >
> > # Perl 5 code is not strict by default, while Perl 6 code is. But it
> > should be easy to relax with -e or maybe even a bare version number:
>
> this would suck. Badly.
>
> We should not be opt