I'm looking at the following code snippet:
my @ret = <someMethod>
return (undef) if( $DB_ERROR );
return (undef) unless ($#ret >= 0);
Does $#
just give you a count of elements in a array?
I'm looking at the following code snippet:
my @ret = <someMethod>
return (undef) if( $DB_ERROR );
return (undef) unless ($#ret >= 0);
Does $#
just give you a count of elements in a array?
$#arrayname
gives you the index of the last element, so if array @ret
has 2 elements then $#ret
is 1.
And, as noted by Barry Brown, an empty array gives -1.
To get the length you can use the array in scalar context:
print scalar @ret;
edg is correct, but the original code is unnecessarily obtuse. In most cases, $#foo
is a red flag that the code could be written more simply using scalar @foo
.
return (undef) unless ($#ret >= 0);
unless foo >= bar
is difficult to puzzle out. First, turn it into a positive statement.
return (undef) if ($#ret < 0);
When is $#ret < 0? When it's -1. A $#ret of -1 is an array of length 0. So the above can be written much more simply as...
return (undef) if scalar @ret <= 0;
But you can't have a negative length array, so...
return (undef) if scalar @ret == 0;
And == is in scalar context, so that "scalar" is redundant...
return (undef) if @ret == 0;
But that's just a wordy way of saying "if @ret
is false".
return (undef) if !@ret;
Which I think for simple statement modifiers is better expressed with unless.
return (undef) unless @ret;
Isn't that easier to follow?
As a final side-note, return undef
is discouraged because it does the wrong thing in list context. You get back a list containing one undef element, which is true. Instead, just use a blank return which returns undef in scalar context and an empty list in list context.
return unless @ret;
return undef
being discouraged. In some cases, you do want to return an explicit undef
even in list context. It depends on how the function is usually used. It's not that you shouldn't use return undef
, it's just that you shouldn't use it without thinking "why am I using return undef
here?" If you have a good answer, then go ahead and do it.
@foo
is a count of elements, and $#foo
is the last index. If you're running through a for-index loop, you want to use $#foo
. Same with the array slice @draegtun mentioned. For the use case the OP presented, @foo
is more accurate, since the statements are just checking for a non-zero count of elements.
May 1, 2020 at 21:39
$#foo
has its uses, but in most cases they indicate the code could be simpler. Full 3-part for loops are themselves a red flag, as is iterating by index. for my $idx (0..$#foo)
has its uses, but they can often be better written as for my $thing (@foo)
.
$#foo
when they should be using @foo
.
To summarize everyone else, that code is much more legible if written like this:
my @ret = someMethod();
return if $DB_ERROR;
return unless @ret;
return;
and return undef;
behave differently in list context (returning an empty list and returning a one-element list containing undef
, respectively).
Jan 4, 2019 at 14:34