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In Haskell (and various other functional programming languages), pattern matching can be used to assign specific elements of a list while discarding others:

Prelude> let [x, _, z] = "abc"
Prelude> x
'a'
Prelude> [z, x]
"ca"

Note that ‘_’ is not a variable and hasn't been assigned anything:

Prelude> _

<interactive>:5:1: Pattern syntax in expression context: _

For an Irssi script, written in Perl, I want to do a similar thing and discard the 2nd element of ‘@_’ (i.e. not assign it to anything):

my ($message, _, $windowItem) = @_;

This fails with the error message: “Can't declare constant item in "my" at [...]overlength_filter.pl line 17, near ") ="

So what is the Perl equivalent of this underscore wildcard?

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  • It's hard to search for an answer to this without running into regular expressions. :-/ Jan 17, 2015 at 2:30

2 Answers 2

9

Just assign it to undef.

my ($message, undef, $windowItem) = @_;

1
3

You can also take a slice of the array :)

my( $message , $winItem ) = @_[ 0, 2];
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  • Then what happens if I want the first, third, and fifth elements? With undef it's obvious. With the slice, would I use @_[0, 2, 4]? Anyway, having read this question, it appears that this slice approach is less efficient, so I consider the undef pattern to be better practice in general. Jan 17, 2015 at 3:22
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    @JamesHaigh: I think you have misunderstood the question that you link to, and in any case you shouldn't be thinking about speed and efficiency until you have written a program that is as clear and maintainable as possible. I personally think the array slice notation is much clearer in general, for instance, my ($x, $y) = @array[4,9] versus my (undef, undef, undef, undef, $x, undef, undef, undef, undef, $y) = @array
    – Borodin
    Jan 17, 2015 at 3:37
  • Borodin: Sure, it's definitely more compact for situations like the example you describe, especially since ‘undef’ is 5 characters rather than 1, but if your main aims are code readability and maintainability, then this programming pattern with long arrays of arguments probably isn't best practice anyway. Also, you'd probably be better-off using a language better-suited to writing elegant, readable, maintainable code in the first place. I may be biased towards purely-functional programming languages, but even within the imperative paradigm, Python is a good choice for code readability. Jan 17, 2015 at 18:43
  • @Borodin: I don't agree that you should not have any consideration of speed and efficiency until the end. I'm not talking about premature optimisation here; I think that it's important to get in the habit of using programming patterns that will avoid much inefficiency straight-off, even though it isn't important here for such a small list. In the worst-case, if you haven't paid any attention to efficiency while writing a program, you may end up with a resource-hog that is flawed by design and requires reïmplementation practically from scratch in order to fix. Jan 17, 2015 at 18:50
  • @Borodin: I found that question from the Q/A infobox of this DDG search while trying to understand the format of Perl's slice notation (which, btw., this answer could do with a reference to Perl's documentation on slices), and only skimmed through it. I interpreted “without creating a whole new array” and “without having Perl copy loads of data in the background” to indicate that when Perl evaluates @array[@slice] it actually makes a new array before assigning to the pattern-matched LHS list, which is avoided with the undef approach. Is this not the case? Jan 17, 2015 at 19:24

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