On 03/14/2017 12:02 AM, Brent Laabs wrote:
I'm not sure what you mean by lexiconical. I can't find any references
to it in the official perl documentation (which would technically be
lexicanonical, right?).
The joke was that everything you did not understand was lexiconical.
But if you're ta
I'm not sure what you mean by lexiconical. I can't find any references to
it in the official perl documentation (which would technically be
lexicanonical, right?).
But if you're talking about lexical scope, then yeah, Perl 6 enforces that
even more than Perl 5 does by default.
On Mon, Mar 13, 20
On 03/13/2017 10:20 PM, Brandon Allbery wrote:
Just to be a little more clear about what is happening here:
Perl 5 tended to treat things as strings if you use them as strings, or
as numbers if you use them as numbers. Perl 6 is more strict about that,
but makes an exception for specifically num
Just to be a little more clear about what is happening here:
Perl 5 tended to treat things as strings if you use them as strings, or as
numbers if you use them as numbers. Perl 6 is more strict about that, but
makes an exception for specifically numbers and strings; if you have
noticed the class "
On 03/13/2017 09:16 PM, ToddAndMargo wrote:
What am I doing wrong now !?!?! :'( :'( :'(
#!/usr/bin/perl6
sub Test () {
my $f = $?FILE; say "\$\?FILE=<$f>";
my $g = $?FILE.IO.basename; say "\$\?FILE.IO.basename=<$g>";
( my $IAm = $?FILE ) ~~ s|.*"/"||; say "Regex \$IAm=<$IAm>";
What am I doing wrong now !?!?! :'( :'( :'(
#!/usr/bin/perl6
sub Test () {
my $f = $?FILE; say "\$\?FILE=<$f>";
my $g = $?FILE.IO.basename; say "\$\?FILE.IO.basename=<$g>";
( my $IAm = $?FILE ) ~~ s|.*"/"||; say "Regex \$IAm=<$IAm>";
# sub Test () { #`(Sub|58588296) ... }