Around line 477, it explains that
our $count;
method ^count { return $count }
Such a I is always delegated to the C
object just as methods like C<.does> are, so it's possible to call
this as C or C<$dog.count>.
However, around line 1983 it
On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 11:34:03AM -0600, Tom Christiansen wrote:
: >I'm still somewhat ambivalent about this, myself. My previous
: >experience with hyphens in identifiers is chiefly in languages that
: >don't generally have algebraic expressions, e.g. LISP, XML, so it will
: >take some getting u
On Tue, 12 Aug 2008 10:03:03 +0200, Michael Mangelsdorf wrote:
> I also tried to say that as special characters (not 7-bit ASCII)
> like for hyper ops have already been admitted, the question of just how
> far ($foo&bar) this admission should (be allowed to) is just around
> the corner.
Completely
Thanks, guys.
I was about to point out the difficulties for editors to get their
syntax highlighting and auto-indenting right, but then I remembered
that programming languages are (or should be) designed for the
convenience of people and not to make the tasks easier for tools
working on them.
Reg