What is going on here is that import
is not a built-in Perl function. Instead, it is a method that use
typically calls on a package after it is loaded - you seem to be trying to call it on a filename, which won't work.
I guess you are trying to dynamically load a package based on the contents of those variables. Here's one way of several to do that:
my $filename = '/path/to/Package/Name.pm';
my $packagename = 'Package::Name';
require $filename;
$packagename->import();
One thing to keep in mind about loading modules dynamically like this is that, unlike modules loaded by use
, Perl won't know about the functions exported from those packages at compile time. The consequence is that you can't omit parentheses from calls to those functions.
So for example: If you have a module Foo
that exports a function foo
, you could say: use Foo; foo "bar";
. But if you instead load Foo
with the above code, you have to say foo("bar");
.
By the way, I doubt that 0689::vg76
is the name of one of your packages. If you could explain more about what you're trying to load, i.e. what the files 0689/vg76.pm
look like and what you're loading from them (like, do they actually have a sub import
?), perhaps we could suggest a more fitting method of loading them.
The reason that import $projectID . '/' . $gTable;
is still valid syntax is that Perl is interpreting it as Indirect Object Syntax, wherein method_name $object @parameters;
is taken as $object->method_name(@parameters);
.
The indirect object syntax is mostly used when print
ing to a filehandle, as in print $filehandle $output
, but other than that, its use is discouraged, one reason being the confusing syntax issues you are observing here.
You can use use B::Deparse
to see how Perl interprets your source code:
$ perl -MO=Deparse,-p -e 'import $projectID . "/" . $gTable;'
(($projectID->import . '/') . $gTable);
The reason you are getting that error message is that, on Perl releases before v5.18 (references: bug, commit, delta), the string on the left of the ->
was required to be a known name, or start with an alphanumeric character. (And even though as of v5.18, you can theoretically say "0689/vg76"->import
, that's almost certainly not what you want, as I explained above.)
import
function; it is a method defined by modules that wish to export their values to external code, and requires a package name as part of the method call. What is in$projectID.'/'.$gTable
? Is it a proper module definition? It isn't advisable to learn a language by making wild guesses at the correct syntax. Please read the documentation before asking for free world-wide help with nonsensical code.