Re: Keyword arguments

2002-11-06 Thread Austin Hastings
I think Damian already covered this: it's the semicolon. sub mysub(String $content; int $key, int $align) { ... } sub callmysub { mysub(Testing .. 1, 2, 3!; key = 1024, align = Module::RIGHT); } Which, upon reflection, apparently introduces an implicit hashparsing context for autoquoting

Re: Keyword arguments

2002-11-06 Thread Luke Palmer
Mailing-List: contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]; run by ezmlm From: Piers Cawley [EMAIL PROTECTED] Date: Wed, 06 Nov 2002 12:44:39 + X-SMTPD: qpsmtpd/0.12, http://develooper.com/code/qpsmtpd/ So, I was, thinking about the way Common Lisp handles keyword arguments. It's possible to declare a

Re: Keyword arguments

2002-11-06 Thread Paul Johnson
Austin Hastings said: sub callmysub { mysub(Testing .. 1, 2, 3!; key = 1024, align = Module::RIGHT); } Which, upon reflection, apparently introduces an implicit hashparsing context for autoquoting hashkeys. Those are pairs, aren't they? -- Paul Johnson - [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Re: Keyword arguments

2002-11-06 Thread Piers Cawley
Paul Johnson [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: Austin Hastings said: sub callmysub { mysub(Testing .. 1, 2, 3!; key = 1024, align = Module::RIGHT); } Which, upon reflection, apparently introduces an implicit hashparsing context for autoquoting hashkeys. Those are pairs, aren't they? Yup.