In Perl, what is the difference between quoting with double quotes("), single quotes('), and grave accents(`)?
This code:
#!/bin/env perl
use v5.10;
say "Hello";
say 'Hi';
say `Hola`;
gives the following result:
Hello Hi
In Perl, what is the difference between quoting with double quotes("), single quotes('), and grave accents(`)?
This code:
#!/bin/env perl
use v5.10;
say "Hello";
say 'Hi';
say `Hola`;
gives the following result:
Hello Hi
''
Construct strings without interpolation. There is also a q()
operator that does the same.
my $foo = 'bar';
print '$foo'; # prints the word $foo
print q($foo); # is equivalent
You would use single quotes when you just have text and there are no variables inside the text.
""
Construct strings with interpolation of variables. There is also a qq()
operator that does the same.
my $foo = 'bar';
print "$foo"; # prints the word bar
print qq($foo); # is equivalent
Use these if you want to put variables into your string. A typical example would be in an old-fashioned CGI program, where you see this:
print "<td>$row[0]</td>";
The qq()
variant comes in handy if your text contains double-quotes.
print qq{<a href="$url">$link_text</a>}; # I prefer qq{} to qq()
This is way easier to read than escape all the quotes.
print "<a href=\"$url\">$link_text</a>"; # this is hard to read
``
Shell out and execute a command. The return value of the other program is returned. There is also a qx()
operator that does the same. This interpolates variables.
print `ls`; # prints a directory listing of the working directory
my $res = qx(./foo --bar);
Use this if you want to write a script that is a bit more powerful than a shell script, where you need to call external programs and capture their output.
All the interpolating ones can only interpolate variables, not commands.
my $foo = 1;
my $bar = 2;
print "$foo + $bar";
This will print 1 + 2. It will not actually calculate and print 3.
All of those (and more) are explain in perlop under Quote and Quotelike operators.