> -----Original Message-----
> From: Randal L. Schwartz [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> Sent: Wednesday, December 24, 2003 3:50 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: the ref() function: what does it mean when ...
> 
> 
> >>>>> "Wiggins" == Wiggins D Anconia <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> 
> Wiggins> Out of curiousity, why/when *in Perl* would you take a 
> Wiggins> reference to something that holds a reference?  And, 
> "how deep 
> Wiggins> does the well go?" (how far will Perl take the above 
> Wiggins> indirection?)... I suppose I could just test, but I 
> am rather 
> Wiggins> lazy...
> 
> For the same reason you might take a reference to a scalar 
> otherwise...  indirection.
> 
> For example, I might have
> 
>         my $active_table = [EMAIL PROTECTED];
> 
> and then I want to call a subroutine to decide a new active table:
> 
>         adjust_table(\$active_table);
> 
>         sub adjust_table {
>                 my $table_ref = shift;
>                 $$table_ref = rand(2) > 1 ? [EMAIL PROTECTED] : [EMAIL PROTECTED];
>         }
> 
> I can't change $active_table except by reference.
> 

My question would be, why force the reference issue at all when
you could do something like:

  my $active_table = [EMAIL PROTECTED];

  $active_table=adjust_table();

  sub adjust_table {
    return(rand(2) > 1 ? [EMAIL PROTECTED] : [EMAIL PROTECTED]);
  }

Shawn



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