Consider the following snippet:
use strict;
use warnings;
my %a = ( a => 1,
b => 2,
c => 'cucu',
d => undef,
r => 1,
br => 2,
cr => 'cucu',
dr => '321312321',
);
my $c = %a;
print $c;
The result of this is 5/8
and I don't understand what this represents. I read somewhere that a number from this fraction looking result might represent the number of buckets from the hash, but clearly this is not the case.
Does anyone knows how a perl hash is evaluated in scalar context?
Edit
I added a few other hashes to print:
use strict;
use warnings;
use 5.010;
my %a = ( a => 1,
b => 2,
c => 'cucu',
d => undef,
r => 1,
br => 2,
cr => 'cucu',
dr => '321312321',
);
my $c = %a;
say $c; # 5/8
%a = ( a => 1,
b => 21,
c => 'cucu',
br => 2,
cr => 'cucu',
dr => '321312321',
);
$c = %a;
say $c; # 4/8
%a = ( a => 1,
b => 2,
c => 'cucu',
d => undef,
r => 1,
br => 2,
cr => 'cucu',
dr => '321312321',
drr => '32131232122',
);
$c = %a;
say $c; #6/8
So, you call a 'tuple' like a => 1
a bucket in the hash? in that case, why is the last hash still having 8 as a denominator when it has 9 'tuples' ?
Thank you all for your responses until now :)
Boolean context is just a special kind of scalar context
?