9

The below one the code.

sub max 
    {
        if (@_[0] > @_[1]) 
        {
            @_[0];
        }
        else
        {
            @_[1];
        }
    }
    print "biggest is ".&max(37,25);

When I ran it, I got the following warnings,

Scalar values @_[0] better written as $_[0] at file.pl line 3.
Scalar values @_[1] better written as $_[1] at file.pl line 3.
Scalar values @_[0] better written as $_[0] at file.pl line 5.
Scalar values @_[0] better written as $_[0] at file.pl line 9.
biggest is 37.

Although I got a correct output, but I wonder what could be the reason behind this warning, Since I think that using @_ in a subroutine would be apropriate than $_.

4
  • I mean '@_' and '$_' not "@" and "$". Apr 15, 2013 at 10:30
  • 1
    Don't add corrections in the comment field, use the edit button on your question to add the new information to your question instead.
    – TLP
    Apr 15, 2013 at 10:41
  • 2
    possible duplicate of What are the consequences of "$scalar = @array[n]"? Apr 15, 2013 at 11:29
  • 4
    You're getting a warning for exactly the reason that Perl told you. Getting a single element from an array is better done using $, not @. The next time you get a warning from Perl that you don't understand, try adding use diagnostics to your code and see what that tells you.
    – Dave Cross
    Apr 15, 2013 at 14:39

3 Answers 3

25

The problem is that you are referring to your single array element by using an array slice instead of a scalar. Just like the error says. An array slice is a list of elements from an array, for example:

my @a = (0 .. 9);
print @a[0,3,4];    # prints 034

Conversely, when you refer to a single array element you use the scalar prefix $:

print $a[3];        # prints 3

So when you do

@_[0];

Perl is telling you that the proper way to refer to a scalar value is by not using an array slice, but rather to use the scalar notation:

$_[0];

That is all.

7
  • hm, not I try to imagine, how can I input into function specific parameters, so, @_[0] and $_[0] are not the same. @TLP, any ideas? Apr 15, 2013 at 11:15
  • 2
    loldop: $_[0] has nothing to do with the variable $_. You read _[0] as "index 0 in the array called _, i.e. @_" and $ as "return as scalar value". Apr 15, 2013 at 11:22
  • @StefanMajewsky I know about difference between $_ and @_. But I try to imagine in which situation in function @_[0] doesn't mean $_[0] (only if you use scalar function or other kind of operations/operators, which have different scalar/list/array behaviour) Apr 15, 2013 at 11:35
  • 1
    @StefanMajewsky all good, I find good answer on queston above What are the consequences of "$scalar = @array[n]"? in comment to OP question Apr 15, 2013 at 11:37
  • Perl does sometimes get it wrong though perl -e'use warnings "syntax";@_[qw"0 1"]' Apr 15, 2013 at 16:34
3

Try to understand it with this example:

@array = (1,2,3); #array is the name of the array and @ means that it's an array
print $array[1];  
#this will print element at index 1 and you're doing it in scalar context

Similarly,

@_ = (1,2,3); #_ is the name of the array
print $_[1]; 
#this will print element at index 1 of array _ and again you're doing it in scalar context
0
1

You are referring to an array, instead of a scalar. @_[0] means ($_[0]). But perl is kind of clever so it warns You that instead of an explicit single element list You should return a scalar. Here You should use $_[0].

I suggest to use prototype, as now You could call max (1, 2, 3) and the result will be 2, instead of 3. So define as

sub max ($$) { $_[0] > $_[1]) ? $_[0] : $_[1] }

Or better, You can use for undefined number (>=2) of elements. Maybe pointless to call it with 0 or 1 items.

sub max (@) { 
    return undef if $#_<0; 
    my $s = shift; 
    for(@_) { $s = $_ if $_ > $s } $s 
} 
6
  • 4
    Using Perl prototypes is usually... not a particularly good idea. Apr 15, 2013 at 14:14
  • @Dave Sherohman: Why not? It makes the definition more clear and does checks in compilation time.
    – TrueY
    Apr 15, 2013 at 18:41
  • "Perl 5's prototypes serve two purposes. First, they're hints to the parser to change the way it parses subroutines and their arguments. Second, they change the way Perl 5 handles arguments to those subroutines when it executes them. A common novice mistake is to assume that they serve the same language purpose as subroutine signatures in other languages. This is not true." - modernperlbooks.com/mt/2009/08/the-problem-with-prototypes.html Apr 15, 2013 at 21:51
  • @Dave Sherohman: Generally I disagree with You. If You want to let the programmer to use the max for two scalars only (first case) then I would suggest to use the prototype. In second case I agree with You (more generix max()), because in that case it cannot be called with an array in the argument. I fixed that! Thanks for Your comment!
    – TrueY
    Apr 16, 2013 at 8:56
  • I guess a bare "return" is better than "return undef"
    – cstamas
    Apr 30, 2013 at 20:53

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