I recommend placing your code at the bottom.
Issue 1
The latter snippet poor because myFunction
is in scope of $stuff
, but it shouldn't be. That's easy to fix though.
{
my $stuff = myFunction();
}
sub myFunction {
#Do something
}
Ok, so that's not a big issue since I place all top-level code in a block, even if it comes at the end. It looks cleaner to me that way, and it makes it easier to transform into a sub from which I can return
.
sub myFunction {
#Do something
}
sub main {
return 0 if is_nothing_to_do();
my $stuff = myFunction();
...
return 0;
}
exit(main(parse_args));
Issue 2
Many languages require that you declare your subs before you call them. That's rarely needed in Perl, though there are a couple of scenarios where it is required. Subs with prototypes is one of those. If you wanted to place your code at the top, you would need to add declarations even before that.
sub myFunction(&@);
{
my $stuff = myFunction { ... } ...;
}
sub myFunction(&@) {
#Do something
}
You probably never have to do that since all but some rare uses of prototypes is discouraged, and the other scenarios are even rarer.
Issue 3
You might accidentally skip initialization code by placing your top-level code before your subroutines.
Compare:
print my_counter(), "\n"; # Warns, then prints a blank line
...
{
my $counter = 1;
sub my_counter {
return $counter++;
}
}
...
and
...
{
my $counter = 1;
sub my_counter {
return $counter++;
}
}
...
print my_counter(), "\n"; # Prints 1
Issue 4
Many languages require that you declare your subs before you call them, so more people will be more familiar with having the top-level code at the bottom.
sub listfiles
, so that you most often do not actually need to read the code. If you have a lot of subs, you might want to create a module, or modules to create some structure.