on the #catalyst channel today we had lots of pains debugging where
a die will go to eventually, within a cascade of eval { }s and what
not.
In Perl 6 one thing that could ease this is to be able to easily
know where we will die to, without having to walk the stack and
checking which scope entries
On Thu, Mar 23, 2006 at 02:27:07PM +0200, Yuval Kogman wrote:
: on the #catalyst channel today we had lots of pains debugging where
: a die will go to eventually, within a cascade of eval { }s and what
: not.
:
: In Perl 6 one thing that could ease this is to be able to easily
: know where we will
On Mon, Mar 20, 2006 at 01:26:03PM +0100, TSa wrote:
: HaloO,
:
: S03 does explicitly disallow auto-reversed ranges.
: And I'm not sure if the upto operator has a downto
: cousin where ^-4 == (-1, -2, -3, -4) returns a list
: that is suitable for indexing an array from the back.
: Why is that so?
On Thu, Mar 23, 2006 at 08:14:03 -0800, Larry Wall wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 23, 2006 at 02:27:07PM +0200, Yuval Kogman wrote:
>
> How else would you implement it that doesn't impact performance?
> One of the main reasons for having exceptions is that they're exceptional,
> and should be pessimized wit