1) sub name() {....}
2) sub name {....}
3) sub name ($j,$j) {.....}
These three are the different ways to declare subroutines in Perl. Want to know the difference between them.
Perl has a feature called prototypes that change how an invocation of that subroutine is parsed at compile time. This feature is not useful to declare an argument list. Prototypes are very limited and have to be declared before the sub is invoked.
sub name()
declares that this sub doesn't take any arguments. Invoking that sub with arguments is a compilation error: name(1)
aborts with Too many arguments for main::name
. If you invoke that sub before declaring it, you'll get an optional main::name() called too early to check prototype
warning.
sub name
is the regular form without any prototypes which you should always use. It is parsed equivalently to the prototype (@)
.
sub name($i, $j)
is a compilation error: Illegal character in prototype for main::name
. The only characters allowed in the prototype sub-language are:
$
scalar context. In a referene spec: scalar@
list context, slurpy. In a reference spec: array%
list context, slurpy. In a reference spec: hash*
glob or things coercible to a glob&
subroutine. In initial position: bare code block_
scalar or $_
+
collection reference. Breaks on objects.;
end of required arguments\x
reference of type x
where x is $%@*&
\[…]
a reference that can be of any type in the brackets.In Perl arguments are passed through the @_
array, and are unpacked like my ($i, $j) = @_
inside the subroutine. Prototypes have nothing to do with that.
There are however syntax extensions that hijack that position to declare arguments (not prototypes). With signatures
, declarations like sub foo($x, $y)
are possible. Other modules like Function::Parameters
and Kavorka
introduce new keywords (func
or fun
) and allow additional features like types, constraints, keyword arguments, ….
3)
is invalid:perl -we 'sub name ($j,$j){}'