Adriano Ferreira a.r.ferreira-at-gmail.com |Perl 6| wrote:
On Sat, May 3, 2008 at 4:00 PM, John M. Dlugosz
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I've searched the archives, but did not see a good explanation of what eqv 
does, and what is meant by snapshotting in the description of the synopses.

 Can anyone explain it (with examples?) or point to an existing treatment, 
please?

I think the best explanation so far is at Synopsis 03, section
"Comparison Semantics"

http://feather.perl6.nl/syn/S03.html#Comparison_semantics

"
Binary |eqv| tests equality much like |===| does, but does so with "snapshot" semantics rather than "eternal" semantics. For top-level components of your value that are of immutable types, |eqv| is identical in behavior to |===|. For components of your value that are mutable, however, rather than comparing object identity using |===|, the |eqv| operator tests whether the canonical representation of both subvalues would be identical if we took a snapshot of them right now and compared those (now-immutable) snapshots using |===|.
"


That's exactly what I find lacking. Hence the desire to find someone to explain that, and then write a better description to file away for future use.

--John

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