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In Perl, if I have:

no strict;
@ARY = (58, 90);

To operate on an element of the array, say it, the 2nd one, I would write (possibly as part of a larger expression):

$ARY[1]  # The most common way found in Perldoc's idioms.

Though, for some reason these also work:

@ARY[1]
@{ARY[1]}

Resulting all in the same object:

print (\$ARY[1]);
print (\@ARY[1]);
print (\@{ARY[1]});

Output:

SCALAR(0x9dbcdc)
SCALAR(0x9dbcdc)
SCALAR(0x9dbcdc)

What is the syntax rules that enable this sort of constructs? How far could one devise reliable program code with each of these constructs, or with a mix of all of them either? How interchangeable are these expressions? (always speaking in a non-strict context).

On a concern of justifying how I come into this question, I agree "use strict" as a better practice, still I'm interested at some knowledge on build-up non-strict expressions.

In an attemp to find myself some help to this uneasiness, I came to:

  • The notion on "no strict;" of not complaining about undeclared variables and quirk syntax.
  • The prefix dereference having higher precedence than subindex [] (perldsc § "Caveat on precedence").
  • The clarification on when to use @ instead of $ (perldata § "Slices").
  • The lack of "[]" (array subscript / slice) description among the Perl's operators (perlop), which lead me to think it is not an operator... (yet it has to be something else. But, what?).

For what I learned, none of these hints, put together, make me better understand my issue.

Thanks in advance.

2
  • IMHO, the knowledge for strict and no strict - is the same. The difference is only than the strict will help you write correct programs. Switch off the strict only when really needed. (in rare cases, partially, such no strict 'refs'; and such.)
    – clt60
    Sep 8, 2014 at 22:18
  • This isn't anything to do with dereferencing, nor anything to do with strict, as far as I can tell, and strict doesn't know or care about "quirk syntax".
    – hobbs
    Sep 9, 2014 at 2:53

4 Answers 4

4

Quotation from perlfaq4:

What is the difference between $array[1] and @array[1]?

The difference is the sigil, that special character in front of the array name. The $ sigil means "exactly one item", while the @ sigil means "zero or more items". The $ gets you a single scalar, while the @ gets you a list.

Please see: What is the difference between $array[1] and @array[1]?

2

@ARY[1] is indeed a slice, in fact a slice of only one member. The difference is it creates a list context:

@ar1[0] = qw( a b c );    # List context.
$ar2[0] = qw( a b c );    # Scalar context, the last value is returned.
print "<@ar1> <@ar2>\n";

Output:

<a> <c>

Besides using strict, turn warnings on, too. You'll get the following warning:

Scalar value @ar1[0] better written as $ar1[0]

In perlop, you can read that "Perl's prefix dereferencing operators are typed: $, @, %, and &." The standard syntax is SIGIL { ... }, but in the simple cases, the curly braces can be omitted.

See Can you use string as a HASH ref while "strict refs" in use? for some fun with no strict refs and its emulation under strict.

1

Extending choroba's answer, to check a particular context, you can use wantarray

sub context { return wantarray ? "LIST" : "SCALAR" }

print $ary1[0] = context(), "\n";
print @ary1[0] = context(), "\n";

Outputs:

SCALAR
LIST
2
1

Nothing you did requires no strict; other than to hide your error of doing

@ARY = (58, 90);

when you should have done

my @ARY = (58, 90);

The following returns a single element of the array. Since EXPR is to return a single index, it is evaluated in scalar context.

$array[EXPR]

e.g.

my @array = qw( a b c d );
my $index = 2;
my $ele = $array[$index];   # my $ele = 'c';

The following returns the elements identified by LIST. Since LIST is to return 0 or more elements, it must be evaluated in list context.

@array[LIST]

e.g.

my @array = qw( a b c d );
my @indexes ( 1, 2 );
my @slice = $array[@indexes];   # my @slice = qw( b c );

\( $ARY[$index]   )  # Returns a ref to the element returned by $ARY[$index]
\( @ARY[@indexes] )  # Returns refs to each element returned by @ARY[@indexes]

${foo}       # Weird way of writing $foo. Useful in literals, e.g. "${foo}bar"
@{foo}       # Weird way of writing @foo. Useful in literals, e.g. "@{foo}bar"
${foo}[...]  # Weird way of writing $foo[...].

Most people don't even know you can use these outside of string literals.

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