I spent considerable time debugging a script recently, and when I finally found the problem it was because of code that looked like this:
class Foo {
has $.bar;
method () {
# do stuff
$!.bar;
}
}
It turned out the problem was with that $!.bar
, which should have been either $!bar
or $.bar
. I get this.
But why doesn't this die?
Looking at this in more detail, it looks like the issue here is that I'm trying to call a (non-existent) method bar
on $!
, which at this point is Nil
because there haven't been any errors.
And it looks like I can actually call any method I want on Nil
and they all silently return Nil
, including stuff like Nil.this-is-a-fake-method
and Nil.reverse-entropy(123)
.
Is this a feature? If so, what's the rationale?