I'm quite a newcomer to Perl and currently trying to understand mentioned error message.
I've got this piece of code (still mostly for testing pourposes)
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
my %info = (autor => "Karryanna", jazyk => "cs");
vec([%info]);
sub vec
{
my ($hashref) = @_;
print $hashref->autor . "\n";
}
When I try to run it, it gives this error message
Not enough arguments for vec at test.pl line 8, near "])"
When I tried to google it, I found this site which just made me think that preceding the subroutine call with an ampersand is enough. I tried it and it really did help.
However, when I later on ran into another problem, googling took me to this SO question. The point is that the answer states
You should call subroutines without &, e.g. populate(...), unless you specifically want to override the prototype of the sub. If you don't know what a prototype is, just don't use &.
I've got absolutely no idea what a prototype in Perl context is. So - what's the reality like? Should I just use & or is there any other, perhaps more "clean", solution?
Thanks!
(By the way, if I may ask a little bit OT question -- Should I really define subroutine after calling it? It seems really unnatural to me, however, I've already discovered that reverting the order makes the compiler complain)
vec
is a built-in function.vec()
being a built-in function (which conflicts with your sub's name), you should probably pass your hash ref like this:vec(\%info)
, otherwise you will have problems with more complex hash structures.my $foo = $href->{'foo'}; $foo =~ s/foo/bar/g;
Just make sure not to copy references, since they will lead to the same memory location.`