Moritz Lenz writes:
> I've tried to answer that here: http://faq.perl6.org/#say
Thanks. (And more than tried, I reckon you've succeeded.)
Smylers
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views
(well, outside the narrow field of programming language design, which
isn't considered a field of politics by most major parties), so it
wouldn't be beneficial to give the perception of any poliical links,
even inadvertently.
Smylers
>
> Just an idea. Please discuss.
>
o perhaps not what
Perl 6 should be emphasizing.)
Smylers
lonked next to each other.
Fortunately butterflies and parrots can both be very colourful -- so
Camelia could use the Parrot parrot's palette, and there'd be a strong
visual link between them.
Smylers
t boolifies to false,
meaning it won't terminate the loop.
That way we get the intuitive behaviour, but don't need a special case.
And the general mechanism used to make this work is something available
for all Perl programs to take advantage of, not an exception that
requires baking into the core language internals.
Smylers
invoked with exactly one string
argument (but not with an array which happens to contain a string as its
only element).
Smylers
Larry Wall writes:
> On Fri, Jun 18, 2010 at 11:21:52AM +0200, Jan Ingvoldstad wrote:
>
> : On Fri, Jun 18, 2010 at 11:15, Smylers wrote:
> :
> : > For the benefit of Perl 5 programmers used to string reverse it
> : > would be nice to have a warning if reverse is invoke
uct, but things at about the same level as
those that Perl 5 warns about.
> you don't want to do that every time the program is run.
no warnings;
Smylers
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each likely to be useful?
Smylers
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