On Sat, Mar 09, 2013 at 08:19:43PM -0600, Chris Stinemetz wrote:
> I don't think that is true.
>
> Example being:
>
> #!/usr/bin/perl
> use warnings;
> use strict;
>
> use Data::Dumper;
>
> my $firstVar = "One";
> my $secondVar = "Two";
>
> my @array;
> push @array,[$firstVar, $secondVar];
>
> print Dumper \@array;
>
> for my $item ( @array ) {
> print join("\t", @$item[0], @$item[1]), "\n";
> }
>
>
> ## output ##
>
> $VAR1 = [
> [
> 'One',
> 'Two'
> ]
> ];
> One TwoI do not see the point you are trying to make. You created a named array, stuffed an anonymous array ref into it, and then printed its elements out (in a somewhat odd way). What does this demonstrate? Regards, -- Brandon McCaig <[email protected]> <[email protected]> Castopulence Software <https://www.castopulence.org/> Blog <http://www.bamccaig.com/> perl -E '$_=q{V zrna gur orfg jvgu jung V fnl. }. q{Vg qbrfa'\''g nyjnlf fbhaq gung jnl.}; tr/A-Ma-mN-Zn-z/N-Zn-zA-Ma-m/;say'
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