In Perl, the subroutine arguments stored in @_
are always aliases to the values at the call site. This aliasing only persists in @_
, if you copy values out, that's what you get, values.
so in this sub:
sub example {
# @_ is an alias to the arguments
my ($x, $y, @rest) = @_; # $x $y and @rest contain copies of the values
my $args = \@_; # $args contains a reference to @_ which maintains aliases
}
Note that this aliasing happens after list expansion, so if you passed an array to example
, the array expands in list context, and @_
is set to aliases of each element of the array (but the array itself is not available to example
). If you wanted the latter, you would pass a reference to the array.
Aliasing of subroutine arguments is a very useful feature, but must be used with care. To prevent unintended modification of external variables, in Perl 6 you must specify that you want writable aliased arguments with is rw
.
One of the lesser known but useful tricks is to use this aliasing feature to create array refs of aliases
my ($x, $y) = (1, 2);
my $alias = sub {\@_}->($x, $y);
$$alias[1]++; # $y is now 3
or aliased slices:
my $slice = sub {\@_}->(@somearray[3 .. 10]);
it also turns out that using sub {\@_}->(LIST)
to create an array from a list is actually faster than
[ LIST ]
since Perl does not need to copy every value. Of course the downside (or upside depending on your perspective) is that the values remain aliased, so you can't change them without changing the originals.
As tchrist mentions in a comment to another answer, when you use any of Perl's aliasing constructs on @_
, the $_
that they provide you is also an alias to the original subroutine arguments. Such as:
sub trim {s!^\s+!!, s!\s+$!! for @_} # in place trimming of white space
Lastly all of this behavior is nestable, so when using @_
(or a slice of it) in the argument list of another subroutine, it also gets aliases to the first subroutine's arguments:
sub add_1 {$_[0] += 1}
sub add_2 {
add_1(@_) for 1 .. 2;
}
@_
, not$_
. And@_
in asub
often contains aliases rather than copies of values. So if you don't want this behavior in yoursub
, be sure to copy input from@_
tomy
variables at the start.