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Document sub inlining changes
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a0d0e21e 1=head1 NAME
d74e8afc 2X<subroutine> X<function>
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3
4perlsub - Perl subroutines
5
6=head1 SYNOPSIS
7
8To declare subroutines:
d74e8afc 9X<subroutine, declaration> X<sub>
a0d0e21e 10
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11 sub NAME; # A "forward" declaration.
12 sub NAME(PROTO); # ditto, but with prototypes
13 sub NAME : ATTRS; # with attributes
14 sub NAME(PROTO) : ATTRS; # with attributes and prototypes
cb1a09d0 15
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16 sub NAME BLOCK # A declaration and a definition.
17 sub NAME(PROTO) BLOCK # ditto, but with prototypes
30d9c59b 18 sub NAME SIG BLOCK # with signature
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19 sub NAME : ATTRS BLOCK # with attributes
20 sub NAME(PROTO) : ATTRS BLOCK # with prototypes and attributes
30d9c59b 21 sub NAME : ATTRS SIG BLOCK # with attributes and signature
a0d0e21e 22
748a9306 23To define an anonymous subroutine at runtime:
d74e8afc 24X<subroutine, anonymous>
748a9306 25
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26 $subref = sub BLOCK; # no proto
27 $subref = sub (PROTO) BLOCK; # with proto
30d9c59b 28 $subref = sub SIG BLOCK; # with signature
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29 $subref = sub : ATTRS BLOCK; # with attributes
30 $subref = sub (PROTO) : ATTRS BLOCK; # with proto and attributes
30d9c59b 31 $subref = sub : ATTRS SIG BLOCK; # with attribs and signature
748a9306 32
a0d0e21e 33To import subroutines:
d74e8afc 34X<import>
a0d0e21e 35
19799a22 36 use MODULE qw(NAME1 NAME2 NAME3);
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37
38To call subroutines:
d74e8afc 39X<subroutine, call> X<call>
a0d0e21e 40
5f05dabc 41 NAME(LIST); # & is optional with parentheses.
54310121 42 NAME LIST; # Parentheses optional if predeclared/imported.
19799a22 43 &NAME(LIST); # Circumvent prototypes.
5a964f20 44 &NAME; # Makes current @_ visible to called subroutine.
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45
46=head1 DESCRIPTION
47
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48Like many languages, Perl provides for user-defined subroutines.
49These may be located anywhere in the main program, loaded in from
50other files via the C<do>, C<require>, or C<use> keywords, or
be3174d2 51generated on the fly using C<eval> or anonymous subroutines.
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52You can even call a function indirectly using a variable containing
53its name or a CODE reference.
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54
55The Perl model for function call and return values is simple: all
56functions are passed as parameters one single flat list of scalars, and
57all functions likewise return to their caller one single flat list of
58scalars. Any arrays or hashes in these call and return lists will
59collapse, losing their identities--but you may always use
60pass-by-reference instead to avoid this. Both call and return lists may
61contain as many or as few scalar elements as you'd like. (Often a
62function without an explicit return statement is called a subroutine, but
19799a22 63there's really no difference from Perl's perspective.)
d74e8afc 64X<subroutine, parameter> X<parameter>
19799a22 65
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66Any arguments passed in show up in the array C<@_>.
67(They may also show up in lexical variables introduced by a signature;
68see L</Signatures> below.) Therefore, if
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69you called a function with two arguments, those would be stored in
70C<$_[0]> and C<$_[1]>. The array C<@_> is a local array, but its
71elements are aliases for the actual scalar parameters. In particular,
72if an element C<$_[0]> is updated, the corresponding argument is
73updated (or an error occurs if it is not updatable). If an argument
74is an array or hash element which did not exist when the function
75was called, that element is created only when (and if) it is modified
76or a reference to it is taken. (Some earlier versions of Perl
77created the element whether or not the element was assigned to.)
78Assigning to the whole array C<@_> removes that aliasing, and does
79not update any arguments.
d74e8afc 80X<subroutine, argument> X<argument> X<@_>
19799a22 81
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82A C<return> statement may be used to exit a subroutine, optionally
83specifying the returned value, which will be evaluated in the
84appropriate context (list, scalar, or void) depending on the context of
85the subroutine call. If you specify no return value, the subroutine
86returns an empty list in list context, the undefined value in scalar
87context, or nothing in void context. If you return one or more
88aggregates (arrays and hashes), these will be flattened together into
89one large indistinguishable list.
90
91If no C<return> is found and if the last statement is an expression, its
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92value is returned. If the last statement is a loop control structure
93like a C<foreach> or a C<while>, the returned value is unspecified. The
9a989771 94empty sub returns the empty list.
d74e8afc 95X<subroutine, return value> X<return value> X<return>
19799a22 96
30d9c59b 97Aside from an experimental facility (see L</Signatures> below),
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98Perl does not have named formal parameters. In practice all you
99do is assign to a C<my()> list of these. Variables that aren't
100declared to be private are global variables. For gory details
101on creating private variables, see L<"Private Variables via my()">
102and L<"Temporary Values via local()">. To create protected
103environments for a set of functions in a separate package (and
104probably a separate file), see L<perlmod/"Packages">.
d74e8afc 105X<formal parameter> X<parameter, formal>
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106
107Example:
108
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109 sub max {
110 my $max = shift(@_);
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111 foreach $foo (@_) {
112 $max = $foo if $max < $foo;
113 }
cb1a09d0 114 return $max;
a0d0e21e 115 }
cb1a09d0 116 $bestday = max($mon,$tue,$wed,$thu,$fri);
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117
118Example:
119
120 # get a line, combining continuation lines
121 # that start with whitespace
122
123 sub get_line {
19799a22 124 $thisline = $lookahead; # global variables!
54310121 125 LINE: while (defined($lookahead = <STDIN>)) {
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126 if ($lookahead =~ /^[ \t]/) {
127 $thisline .= $lookahead;
128 }
129 else {
130 last LINE;
131 }
132 }
19799a22 133 return $thisline;
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134 }
135
136 $lookahead = <STDIN>; # get first line
19799a22 137 while (defined($line = get_line())) {
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138 ...
139 }
140
09bef843 141Assigning to a list of private variables to name your arguments:
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142
143 sub maybeset {
144 my($key, $value) = @_;
cb1a09d0 145 $Foo{$key} = $value unless $Foo{$key};
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146 }
147
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148Because the assignment copies the values, this also has the effect
149of turning call-by-reference into call-by-value. Otherwise a
150function is free to do in-place modifications of C<@_> and change
151its caller's values.
d74e8afc 152X<call-by-reference> X<call-by-value>
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153
154 upcase_in($v1, $v2); # this changes $v1 and $v2
155 sub upcase_in {
54310121 156 for (@_) { tr/a-z/A-Z/ }
157 }
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158
159You aren't allowed to modify constants in this way, of course. If an
160argument were actually literal and you tried to change it, you'd take a
161(presumably fatal) exception. For example, this won't work:
d74e8afc 162X<call-by-reference> X<call-by-value>
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163
164 upcase_in("frederick");
165
f86cebdf 166It would be much safer if the C<upcase_in()> function
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167were written to return a copy of its parameters instead
168of changing them in place:
169
19799a22 170 ($v3, $v4) = upcase($v1, $v2); # this doesn't change $v1 and $v2
cb1a09d0 171 sub upcase {
54310121 172 return unless defined wantarray; # void context, do nothing
cb1a09d0 173 my @parms = @_;
54310121 174 for (@parms) { tr/a-z/A-Z/ }
c07a80fd 175 return wantarray ? @parms : $parms[0];
54310121 176 }
cb1a09d0 177
19799a22 178Notice how this (unprototyped) function doesn't care whether it was
a2293a43 179passed real scalars or arrays. Perl sees all arguments as one big,
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180long, flat parameter list in C<@_>. This is one area where
181Perl's simple argument-passing style shines. The C<upcase()>
182function would work perfectly well without changing the C<upcase()>
183definition even if we fed it things like this:
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184
185 @newlist = upcase(@list1, @list2);
186 @newlist = upcase( split /:/, $var );
187
188Do not, however, be tempted to do this:
189
190 (@a, @b) = upcase(@list1, @list2);
191
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192Like the flattened incoming parameter list, the return list is also
193flattened on return. So all you have managed to do here is stored
17b63f68 194everything in C<@a> and made C<@b> empty. See
13a2d996 195L<Pass by Reference> for alternatives.
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196
197A subroutine may be called using an explicit C<&> prefix. The
198C<&> is optional in modern Perl, as are parentheses if the
199subroutine has been predeclared. The C<&> is I<not> optional
200when just naming the subroutine, such as when it's used as
201an argument to defined() or undef(). Nor is it optional when you
202want to do an indirect subroutine call with a subroutine name or
203reference using the C<&$subref()> or C<&{$subref}()> constructs,
c47ff5f1 204although the C<< $subref->() >> notation solves that problem.
19799a22 205See L<perlref> for more about all that.
d74e8afc 206X<&>
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207
208Subroutines may be called recursively. If a subroutine is called
209using the C<&> form, the argument list is optional, and if omitted,
210no C<@_> array is set up for the subroutine: the C<@_> array at the
211time of the call is visible to subroutine instead. This is an
212efficiency mechanism that new users may wish to avoid.
d74e8afc 213X<recursion>
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214
215 &foo(1,2,3); # pass three arguments
216 foo(1,2,3); # the same
217
218 foo(); # pass a null list
219 &foo(); # the same
a0d0e21e 220
cb1a09d0 221 &foo; # foo() get current args, like foo(@_) !!
54310121 222 foo; # like foo() IFF sub foo predeclared, else "foo"
cb1a09d0 223
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224Not only does the C<&> form make the argument list optional, it also
225disables any prototype checking on arguments you do provide. This
c07a80fd 226is partly for historical reasons, and partly for having a convenient way
9688be67 227to cheat if you know what you're doing. See L</Prototypes> below.
d74e8afc 228X<&>
c07a80fd 229
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230Since Perl 5.16.0, the C<__SUB__> token is available under C<use feature
231'current_sub'> and C<use 5.16.0>. It will evaluate to a reference to the
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232currently-running sub, which allows for recursive calls without knowing
233your subroutine's name.
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234
235 use 5.16.0;
236 my $factorial = sub {
237 my ($x) = @_;
238 return 1 if $x == 1;
239 return($x * __SUB__->( $x - 1 ) );
240 };
241
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242The behaviour of C<__SUB__> within a regex code block (such as C</(?{...})/>)
243is subject to change.
244
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245Subroutines whose names are in all upper case are reserved to the Perl
246core, as are modules whose names are in all lower case. A subroutine in
247all capitals is a loosely-held convention meaning it will be called
248indirectly by the run-time system itself, usually due to a triggered event.
bf5513e0 249Subroutines whose name start with a left parenthesis are also reserved the
b77865f5 250same way. The following is a list of some subroutines that currently do
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251special, pre-defined things.
252
253=over
254
255=item documented later in this document
256
257C<AUTOLOAD>
258
259=item documented in L<perlmod>
260
261C<CLONE>, C<CLONE_SKIP>,
262
263=item documented in L<perlobj>
264
265C<DESTROY>
266
267=item documented in L<perltie>
268
269C<BINMODE>, C<CLEAR>, C<CLOSE>, C<DELETE>, C<DESTROY>, C<EOF>, C<EXISTS>,
270C<EXTEND>, C<FETCH>, C<FETCHSIZE>, C<FILENO>, C<FIRSTKEY>, C<GETC>,
271C<NEXTKEY>, C<OPEN>, C<POP>, C<PRINT>, C<PRINTF>, C<PUSH>, C<READ>,
272C<READLINE>, C<SCALAR>, C<SEEK>, C<SHIFT>, C<SPLICE>, C<STORE>,
273C<STORESIZE>, C<TELL>, C<TIEARRAY>, C<TIEHANDLE>, C<TIEHASH>,
274C<TIESCALAR>, C<UNSHIFT>, C<UNTIE>, C<WRITE>
275
276=item documented in L<PerlIO::via>
277
278C<BINMODE>, C<CLEARERR>, C<CLOSE>, C<EOF>, C<ERROR>, C<FDOPEN>, C<FILENO>,
279C<FILL>, C<FLUSH>, C<OPEN>, C<POPPED>, C<PUSHED>, C<READ>, C<SEEK>,
280C<SETLINEBUF>, C<SYSOPEN>, C<TELL>, C<UNREAD>, C<UTF8>, C<WRITE>
281
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282=item documented in L<perlfunc>
283
284L<< C<import> | perlfunc/use >>, L<< C<unimport> | perlfunc/use >>,
285L<< C<INC> | perlfunc/require >>
286
287=item documented in L<UNIVERSAL>
288
289C<VERSION>
290
291=item documented in L<perldebguts>
292
293C<DB::DB>, C<DB::sub>, C<DB::lsub>, C<DB::goto>, C<DB::postponed>
294
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295=item undocumented, used internally by the L<overload> feature
296
297any starting with C<(>
298
299=back
ac90fb77 300
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301The C<BEGIN>, C<UNITCHECK>, C<CHECK>, C<INIT> and C<END> subroutines
302are not so much subroutines as named special code blocks, of which you
303can have more than one in a package, and which you can B<not> call
304explicitly. See L<perlmod/"BEGIN, UNITCHECK, CHECK, INIT and END">
5a964f20 305
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306=head2 Signatures
307
308B<WARNING>: Subroutine signatures are experimental. The feature may be
309modified or removed in future versions of Perl.
310
311Perl has an experimental facility to allow a subroutine's formal
312parameters to be introduced by special syntax, separate from the
313procedural code of the subroutine body. The formal parameter list
314is known as a I<signature>. The facility must be enabled first by a
315pragmatic declaration, C<use feature 'signatures'>, and it will produce
316a warning unless the "experimental::signatures" warnings category is
317disabled.
318
319The signature is part of a subroutine's body. Normally the body of a
320subroutine is simply a braced block of code. When using a signature,
321the signature is a parenthesised list that goes immediately before
322the braced block. The signature declares lexical variables that are
323in scope for the block. When the subroutine is called, the signature
324takes control first. It populates the signature variables from the
325list of arguments that were passed. If the argument list doesn't meet
326the requirements of the signature, then it will throw an exception.
327When the signature processing is complete, control passes to the block.
328
329Positional parameters are handled by simply naming scalar variables in
330the signature. For example,
331
332 sub foo ($left, $right) {
333 return $left + $right;
334 }
335
336takes two positional parameters, which must be filled at runtime by
337two arguments. By default the parameters are mandatory, and it is
338not permitted to pass more arguments than expected. So the above is
339equivalent to
340
341 sub foo {
342 die "Too many arguments for subroutine" unless @_ <= 2;
343 die "Too few arguments for subroutine" unless @_ >= 2;
344 my $left = $_[0];
345 my $right = $_[1];
346 return $left + $right;
347 }
348
349An argument can be ignored by omitting the main part of the name from
350a parameter declaration, leaving just a bare C<$> sigil. For example,
351
352 sub foo ($first, $, $third) {
353 return "first=$first, third=$third";
354 }
355
356Although the ignored argument doesn't go into a variable, it is still
357mandatory for the caller to pass it.
358
359A positional parameter is made optional by giving a default value,
360separated from the parameter name by C<=>:
361
362 sub foo ($left, $right = 0) {
363 return $left + $right;
364 }
365
366The above subroutine may be called with either one or two arguments.
367The default value expression is evaluated when the subroutine is called,
368so it may provide different default values for different calls. It is
369only evaluated if the argument was actually omitted from the call.
370For example,
371
372 my $auto_id = 0;
373 sub foo ($thing, $id = $auto_id++) {
374 print "$thing has ID $id";
375 }
376
377automatically assigns distinct sequential IDs to things for which no
378ID was supplied by the caller. A default value expression may also
379refer to parameters earlier in the signature, making the default for
380one parameter vary according to the earlier parameters. For example,
381
382 sub foo ($first_name, $surname, $nickname = $first_name) {
383 print "$first_name $surname is known as \"$nickname\"";
384 }
385
386An optional parameter can be nameless just like a mandatory parameter.
387For example,
388
389 sub foo ($thing, $ = 1) {
390 print $thing;
391 }
392
393The parameter's default value will still be evaluated if the corresponding
394argument isn't supplied, even though the value won't be stored anywhere.
395This is in case evaluating it has important side effects. However, it
396will be evaluated in void context, so if it doesn't have side effects
397and is not trivial it will generate a warning if the "void" warning
398category is enabled. If a nameless optional parameter's default value
399is not important, it may be omitted just as the parameter's name was:
400
401 sub foo ($thing, $=) {
402 print $thing;
403 }
404
405Optional positional parameters must come after all mandatory positional
406parameters. (If there are no mandatory positional parameters then an
407optional positional parameters can be the first thing in the signature.)
408If there are multiple optional positional parameters and not enough
409arguments are supplied to fill them all, they will be filled from left
410to right.
411
412After positional parameters, additional arguments may be captured in a
413slurpy parameter. The simplest form of this is just an array variable:
414
415 sub foo ($filter, @inputs) {
416 print $filter->($_) foreach @inputs;
417 }
418
419With a slurpy parameter in the signature, there is no upper limit on how
420many arguments may be passed. A slurpy array parameter may be nameless
421just like a positional parameter, in which case its only effect is to
422turn off the argument limit that would otherwise apply:
423
424 sub foo ($thing, @) {
425 print $thing;
426 }
427
428A slurpy parameter may instead be a hash, in which case the arguments
429available to it are interpreted as alternating keys and values.
430There must be as many keys as values: if there is an odd argument then
431an exception will be thrown. Keys will be stringified, and if there are
432duplicates then the later instance takes precedence over the earlier,
433as with standard hash construction.
434
435 sub foo ($filter, %inputs) {
436 print $filter->($_, $inputs{$_}) foreach sort keys %inputs;
437 }
438
439A slurpy hash parameter may be nameless just like other kinds of
440parameter. It still insists that the number of arguments available to
441it be even, even though they're not being put into a variable.
442
443 sub foo ($thing, %) {
444 print $thing;
445 }
446
447A slurpy parameter, either array or hash, must be the last thing in the
448signature. It may follow mandatory and optional positional parameters;
449it may also be the only thing in the signature. Slurpy parameters cannot
450have default values: if no arguments are supplied for them then you get
451an empty array or empty hash.
452
453A signature may be entirely empty, in which case all it does is check
454that the caller passed no arguments:
455
456 sub foo () {
457 return 123;
458 }
459
460When using a signature, the arguments are still available in the special
461array variable C<@_>, in addition to the lexical variables of the
462signature. There is a difference between the two ways of accessing the
463arguments: C<@_> I<aliases> the arguments, but the signature variables
464get I<copies> of the arguments. So writing to a signature variable
465only changes that variable, and has no effect on the caller's variables,
466but writing to an element of C<@_> modifies whatever the caller used to
467supply that argument.
468
469There is a potential syntactic ambiguity between signatures and prototypes
470(see L</Prototypes>), because both start with an opening parenthesis and
471both can appear in some of the same places, such as just after the name
472in a subroutine declaration. For historical reasons, when signatures
473are not enabled, any opening parenthesis in such a context will trigger
474very forgiving prototype parsing. Most signatures will be interpreted
475as prototypes in those circumstances, but won't be valid prototypes.
476(A valid prototype cannot contain any alphabetic character.) This will
477lead to somewhat confusing error messages.
478
479To avoid ambiguity, when signatures are enabled the special syntax
480for prototypes is disabled. There is no attempt to guess whether a
481parenthesised group was intended to be a prototype or a signature.
482To give a subroutine a prototype under these circumstances, use a
483L<prototype attribute|attributes/Built-in Attributes>. For example,
484
485 sub foo :prototype($) { $_[0] }
486
487It is entirely possible for a subroutine to have both a prototype and
488a signature. They do different jobs: the prototype affects compilation
489of calls to the subroutine, and the signature puts argument values into
490lexical variables at runtime. You can therefore write
491
492 sub foo :prototype($$) ($left, $right) {
493 return $left + $right;
494 }
495
496The prototype attribute, and any other attributes, must come before
497the signature. The signature always immediately precedes the block of
498the subroutine's body.
499
b687b08b 500=head2 Private Variables via my()
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501X<my> X<variable, lexical> X<lexical> X<lexical variable> X<scope, lexical>
502X<lexical scope> X<attributes, my>
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503
504Synopsis:
505
506 my $foo; # declare $foo lexically local
507 my (@wid, %get); # declare list of variables local
508 my $foo = "flurp"; # declare $foo lexical, and init it
509 my @oof = @bar; # declare @oof lexical, and init it
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510 my $x : Foo = $y; # similar, with an attribute applied
511
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512B<WARNING>: The use of attribute lists on C<my> declarations is still
513evolving. The current semantics and interface are subject to change.
514See L<attributes> and L<Attribute::Handlers>.
cb1a09d0 515
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516The C<my> operator declares the listed variables to be lexically
517confined to the enclosing block, conditional (C<if/unless/elsif/else>),
518loop (C<for/foreach/while/until/continue>), subroutine, C<eval>,
519or C<do/require/use>'d file. If more than one value is listed, the
520list must be placed in parentheses. All listed elements must be
521legal lvalues. Only alphanumeric identifiers may be lexically
325192b1 522scoped--magical built-ins like C<$/> must currently be C<local>ized
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523with C<local> instead.
524
525Unlike dynamic variables created by the C<local> operator, lexical
526variables declared with C<my> are totally hidden from the outside
527world, including any called subroutines. This is true if it's the
528same subroutine called from itself or elsewhere--every call gets
529its own copy.
d74e8afc 530X<local>
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531
532This doesn't mean that a C<my> variable declared in a statically
533enclosing lexical scope would be invisible. Only dynamic scopes
534are cut off. For example, the C<bumpx()> function below has access
535to the lexical $x variable because both the C<my> and the C<sub>
536occurred at the same scope, presumably file scope.
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537
538 my $x = 10;
539 sub bumpx { $x++ }
540
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541An C<eval()>, however, can see lexical variables of the scope it is
542being evaluated in, so long as the names aren't hidden by declarations within
543the C<eval()> itself. See L<perlref>.
d74e8afc 544X<eval, scope of>
cb1a09d0 545
19799a22 546The parameter list to my() may be assigned to if desired, which allows you
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547to initialize your variables. (If no initializer is given for a
548particular variable, it is created with the undefined value.) Commonly
19799a22 549this is used to name input parameters to a subroutine. Examples:
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550
551 $arg = "fred"; # "global" variable
552 $n = cube_root(27);
553 print "$arg thinks the root is $n\n";
554 fred thinks the root is 3
555
556 sub cube_root {
557 my $arg = shift; # name doesn't matter
558 $arg **= 1/3;
559 return $arg;
54310121 560 }
cb1a09d0 561
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562The C<my> is simply a modifier on something you might assign to. So when
563you do assign to variables in its argument list, C<my> doesn't
6cc33c6d 564change whether those variables are viewed as a scalar or an array. So
cb1a09d0 565
5a964f20 566 my ($foo) = <STDIN>; # WRONG?
cb1a09d0
AD
567 my @FOO = <STDIN>;
568
5f05dabc 569both supply a list context to the right-hand side, while
cb1a09d0
AD
570
571 my $foo = <STDIN>;
572
5f05dabc 573supplies a scalar context. But the following declares only one variable:
748a9306 574
5a964f20 575 my $foo, $bar = 1; # WRONG
748a9306 576
cb1a09d0 577That has the same effect as
748a9306 578
cb1a09d0
AD
579 my $foo;
580 $bar = 1;
a0d0e21e 581
cb1a09d0
AD
582The declared variable is not introduced (is not visible) until after
583the current statement. Thus,
584
585 my $x = $x;
586
19799a22 587can be used to initialize a new $x with the value of the old $x, and
cb1a09d0
AD
588the expression
589
590 my $x = 123 and $x == 123
591
19799a22 592is false unless the old $x happened to have the value C<123>.
cb1a09d0 593
55497cff 594Lexical scopes of control structures are not bounded precisely by the
595braces that delimit their controlled blocks; control expressions are
19799a22 596part of that scope, too. Thus in the loop
55497cff 597
19799a22 598 while (my $line = <>) {
55497cff 599 $line = lc $line;
600 } continue {
601 print $line;
602 }
603
19799a22 604the scope of $line extends from its declaration throughout the rest of
55497cff 605the loop construct (including the C<continue> clause), but not beyond
606it. Similarly, in the conditional
607
608 if ((my $answer = <STDIN>) =~ /^yes$/i) {
609 user_agrees();
610 } elsif ($answer =~ /^no$/i) {
611 user_disagrees();
612 } else {
613 chomp $answer;
614 die "'$answer' is neither 'yes' nor 'no'";
615 }
616
19799a22
GS
617the scope of $answer extends from its declaration through the rest
618of that conditional, including any C<elsif> and C<else> clauses,
96090e4f 619but not beyond it. See L<perlsyn/"Simple Statements"> for information
457b36cb 620on the scope of variables in statements with modifiers.
55497cff 621
5f05dabc 622The C<foreach> loop defaults to scoping its index variable dynamically
19799a22
GS
623in the manner of C<local>. However, if the index variable is
624prefixed with the keyword C<my>, or if there is already a lexical
625by that name in scope, then a new lexical is created instead. Thus
626in the loop
d74e8afc 627X<foreach> X<for>
55497cff 628
629 for my $i (1, 2, 3) {
630 some_function();
631 }
632
19799a22
GS
633the scope of $i extends to the end of the loop, but not beyond it,
634rendering the value of $i inaccessible within C<some_function()>.
d74e8afc 635X<foreach> X<for>
55497cff 636
cb1a09d0 637Some users may wish to encourage the use of lexically scoped variables.
19799a22
GS
638As an aid to catching implicit uses to package variables,
639which are always global, if you say
cb1a09d0
AD
640
641 use strict 'vars';
642
19799a22
GS
643then any variable mentioned from there to the end of the enclosing
644block must either refer to a lexical variable, be predeclared via
77ca0c92 645C<our> or C<use vars>, or else must be fully qualified with the package name.
19799a22
GS
646A compilation error results otherwise. An inner block may countermand
647this with C<no strict 'vars'>.
648
649A C<my> has both a compile-time and a run-time effect. At compile
8593bda5 650time, the compiler takes notice of it. The principal usefulness
19799a22
GS
651of this is to quiet C<use strict 'vars'>, but it is also essential
652for generation of closures as detailed in L<perlref>. Actual
653initialization is delayed until run time, though, so it gets executed
654at the appropriate time, such as each time through a loop, for
655example.
656
657Variables declared with C<my> are not part of any package and are therefore
cb1a09d0
AD
658never fully qualified with the package name. In particular, you're not
659allowed to try to make a package variable (or other global) lexical:
660
661 my $pack::var; # ERROR! Illegal syntax
cb1a09d0
AD
662
663In fact, a dynamic variable (also known as package or global variables)
f86cebdf 664are still accessible using the fully qualified C<::> notation even while a
cb1a09d0
AD
665lexical of the same name is also visible:
666
667 package main;
668 local $x = 10;
669 my $x = 20;
670 print "$x and $::x\n";
671
f86cebdf 672That will print out C<20> and C<10>.
cb1a09d0 673
19799a22
GS
674You may declare C<my> variables at the outermost scope of a file
675to hide any such identifiers from the world outside that file. This
676is similar in spirit to C's static variables when they are used at
677the file level. To do this with a subroutine requires the use of
678a closure (an anonymous function that accesses enclosing lexicals).
679If you want to create a private subroutine that cannot be called
680from outside that block, it can declare a lexical variable containing
681an anonymous sub reference:
cb1a09d0
AD
682
683 my $secret_version = '1.001-beta';
684 my $secret_sub = sub { print $secret_version };
685 &$secret_sub();
686
687As long as the reference is never returned by any function within the
5f05dabc 688module, no outside module can see the subroutine, because its name is not in
cb1a09d0 689any package's symbol table. Remember that it's not I<REALLY> called
19799a22 690C<$some_pack::secret_version> or anything; it's just $secret_version,
cb1a09d0
AD
691unqualified and unqualifiable.
692
19799a22
GS
693This does not work with object methods, however; all object methods
694have to be in the symbol table of some package to be found. See
695L<perlref/"Function Templates"> for something of a work-around to
696this.
cb1a09d0 697
c2611fb3 698=head2 Persistent Private Variables
ba1f8e91
RGS
699X<state> X<state variable> X<static> X<variable, persistent> X<variable, static> X<closure>
700
701There are two ways to build persistent private variables in Perl 5.10.
b77865f5 702First, you can simply use the C<state> feature. Or, you can use closures,
ba1f8e91
RGS
703if you want to stay compatible with releases older than 5.10.
704
705=head3 Persistent variables via state()
706
9d42615f 707Beginning with Perl 5.10.0, you can declare variables with the C<state>
4a904372 708keyword in place of C<my>. For that to work, though, you must have
ba1f8e91 709enabled that feature beforehand, either by using the C<feature> pragma, or
4a904372 710by using C<-E> on one-liners (see L<feature>). Beginning with Perl 5.16,
47d235f1 711the C<CORE::state> form does not require the
4a904372 712C<feature> pragma.
ba1f8e91 713
ad0cc46c
FC
714The C<state> keyword creates a lexical variable (following the same scoping
715rules as C<my>) that persists from one subroutine call to the next. If a
716state variable resides inside an anonymous subroutine, then each copy of
717the subroutine has its own copy of the state variable. However, the value
718of the state variable will still persist between calls to the same copy of
719the anonymous subroutine. (Don't forget that C<sub { ... }> creates a new
720subroutine each time it is executed.)
721
ba1f8e91
RGS
722For example, the following code maintains a private counter, incremented
723each time the gimme_another() function is called:
724
725 use feature 'state';
726 sub gimme_another { state $x; return ++$x }
727
ad0cc46c
FC
728And this example uses anonymous subroutines to create separate counters:
729
730 use feature 'state';
731 sub create_counter {
732 return sub { state $x; return ++$x }
733 }
734
ba1f8e91
RGS
735Also, since C<$x> is lexical, it can't be reached or modified by any Perl
736code outside.
737
f292fc7a
RS
738When combined with variable declaration, simple scalar assignment to C<state>
739variables (as in C<state $x = 42>) is executed only the first time. When such
740statements are evaluated subsequent times, the assignment is ignored. The
741behavior of this sort of assignment to non-scalar variables is undefined.
ba1f8e91
RGS
742
743=head3 Persistent variables with closures
5a964f20
TC
744
745Just because a lexical variable is lexically (also called statically)
f86cebdf 746scoped to its enclosing block, C<eval>, or C<do> FILE, this doesn't mean that
5a964f20
TC
747within a function it works like a C static. It normally works more
748like a C auto, but with implicit garbage collection.
749
750Unlike local variables in C or C++, Perl's lexical variables don't
751necessarily get recycled just because their scope has exited.
752If something more permanent is still aware of the lexical, it will
753stick around. So long as something else references a lexical, that
754lexical won't be freed--which is as it should be. You wouldn't want
755memory being free until you were done using it, or kept around once you
756were done. Automatic garbage collection takes care of this for you.
757
758This means that you can pass back or save away references to lexical
759variables, whereas to return a pointer to a C auto is a grave error.
760It also gives us a way to simulate C's function statics. Here's a
761mechanism for giving a function private variables with both lexical
762scoping and a static lifetime. If you do want to create something like
763C's static variables, just enclose the whole function in an extra block,
764and put the static variable outside the function but in the block.
cb1a09d0
AD
765
766 {
54310121 767 my $secret_val = 0;
cb1a09d0
AD
768 sub gimme_another {
769 return ++$secret_val;
54310121 770 }
771 }
cb1a09d0
AD
772 # $secret_val now becomes unreachable by the outside
773 # world, but retains its value between calls to gimme_another
774
54310121 775If this function is being sourced in from a separate file
cb1a09d0 776via C<require> or C<use>, then this is probably just fine. If it's
19799a22 777all in the main program, you'll need to arrange for the C<my>
cb1a09d0 778to be executed early, either by putting the whole block above
f86cebdf 779your main program, or more likely, placing merely a C<BEGIN>
ac90fb77 780code block around it to make sure it gets executed before your program
cb1a09d0
AD
781starts to run:
782
ac90fb77 783 BEGIN {
54310121 784 my $secret_val = 0;
cb1a09d0
AD
785 sub gimme_another {
786 return ++$secret_val;
54310121 787 }
788 }
cb1a09d0 789
3c10abe3
AG
790See L<perlmod/"BEGIN, UNITCHECK, CHECK, INIT and END"> about the
791special triggered code blocks, C<BEGIN>, C<UNITCHECK>, C<CHECK>,
792C<INIT> and C<END>.
cb1a09d0 793
19799a22
GS
794If declared at the outermost scope (the file scope), then lexicals
795work somewhat like C's file statics. They are available to all
796functions in that same file declared below them, but are inaccessible
797from outside that file. This strategy is sometimes used in modules
798to create private variables that the whole module can see.
5a964f20 799
cb1a09d0 800=head2 Temporary Values via local()
d74e8afc
ITB
801X<local> X<scope, dynamic> X<dynamic scope> X<variable, local>
802X<variable, temporary>
cb1a09d0 803
19799a22 804B<WARNING>: In general, you should be using C<my> instead of C<local>, because
6d28dffb 805it's faster and safer. Exceptions to this include the global punctuation
325192b1
RGS
806variables, global filehandles and formats, and direct manipulation of the
807Perl symbol table itself. C<local> is mostly used when the current value
808of a variable must be visible to called subroutines.
cb1a09d0
AD
809
810Synopsis:
811
325192b1
RGS
812 # localization of values
813
555bd962
BG
814 local $foo; # make $foo dynamically local
815 local (@wid, %get); # make list of variables local
816 local $foo = "flurp"; # make $foo dynamic, and init it
817 local @oof = @bar; # make @oof dynamic, and init it
325192b1 818
555bd962
BG
819 local $hash{key} = "val"; # sets a local value for this hash entry
820 delete local $hash{key}; # delete this entry for the current block
821 local ($cond ? $v1 : $v2); # several types of lvalues support
822 # localization
325192b1
RGS
823
824 # localization of symbols
cb1a09d0 825
555bd962
BG
826 local *FH; # localize $FH, @FH, %FH, &FH ...
827 local *merlyn = *randal; # now $merlyn is really $randal, plus
828 # @merlyn is really @randal, etc
829 local *merlyn = 'randal'; # SAME THING: promote 'randal' to *randal
830 local *merlyn = \$randal; # just alias $merlyn, not @merlyn etc
cb1a09d0 831
19799a22
GS
832A C<local> modifies its listed variables to be "local" to the
833enclosing block, C<eval>, or C<do FILE>--and to I<any subroutine
834called from within that block>. A C<local> just gives temporary
835values to global (meaning package) variables. It does I<not> create
836a local variable. This is known as dynamic scoping. Lexical scoping
837is done with C<my>, which works more like C's auto declarations.
cb1a09d0 838
ceb12f1f 839Some types of lvalues can be localized as well: hash and array elements
325192b1
RGS
840and slices, conditionals (provided that their result is always
841localizable), and symbolic references. As for simple variables, this
842creates new, dynamically scoped values.
843
844If more than one variable or expression is given to C<local>, they must be
845placed in parentheses. This operator works
cb1a09d0 846by saving the current values of those variables in its argument list on a
5f05dabc 847hidden stack and restoring them upon exiting the block, subroutine, or
cb1a09d0
AD
848eval. This means that called subroutines can also reference the local
849variable, but not the global one. The argument list may be assigned to if
850desired, which allows you to initialize your local variables. (If no
851initializer is given for a particular variable, it is created with an
325192b1 852undefined value.)
cb1a09d0 853
19799a22 854Because C<local> is a run-time operator, it gets executed each time
325192b1
RGS
855through a loop. Consequently, it's more efficient to localize your
856variables outside the loop.
857
858=head3 Grammatical note on local()
d74e8afc 859X<local, context>
cb1a09d0 860
f86cebdf
GS
861A C<local> is simply a modifier on an lvalue expression. When you assign to
862a C<local>ized variable, the C<local> doesn't change whether its list is viewed
cb1a09d0
AD
863as a scalar or an array. So
864
865 local($foo) = <STDIN>;
866 local @FOO = <STDIN>;
867
5f05dabc 868both supply a list context to the right-hand side, while
cb1a09d0
AD
869
870 local $foo = <STDIN>;
871
872supplies a scalar context.
873
325192b1 874=head3 Localization of special variables
d74e8afc 875X<local, special variable>
3e3baf6d 876
325192b1
RGS
877If you localize a special variable, you'll be giving a new value to it,
878but its magic won't go away. That means that all side-effects related
879to this magic still work with the localized value.
3e3baf6d 880
325192b1
RGS
881This feature allows code like this to work :
882
883 # Read the whole contents of FILE in $slurp
884 { local $/ = undef; $slurp = <FILE>; }
885
886Note, however, that this restricts localization of some values ; for
9d42615f 887example, the following statement dies, as of perl 5.10.0, with an error
325192b1
RGS
888I<Modification of a read-only value attempted>, because the $1 variable is
889magical and read-only :
890
891 local $1 = 2;
892
658a9f31
JD
893One exception is the default scalar variable: starting with perl 5.14
894C<local($_)> will always strip all magic from $_, to make it possible
895to safely reuse $_ in a subroutine.
325192b1
RGS
896
897B<WARNING>: Localization of tied arrays and hashes does not currently
898work as described.
fd5a896a
DM
899This will be fixed in a future release of Perl; in the meantime, avoid
900code that relies on any particular behaviour of localising tied arrays
901or hashes (localising individual elements is still okay).
325192b1 902See L<perl58delta/"Localising Tied Arrays and Hashes Is Broken"> for more
fd5a896a 903details.
d74e8afc 904X<local, tie>
fd5a896a 905
325192b1 906=head3 Localization of globs
d74e8afc 907X<local, glob> X<glob>
3e3baf6d 908
325192b1
RGS
909The construct
910
911 local *name;
912
913creates a whole new symbol table entry for the glob C<name> in the
914current package. That means that all variables in its glob slot ($name,
915@name, %name, &name, and the C<name> filehandle) are dynamically reset.
916
917This implies, among other things, that any magic eventually carried by
918those variables is locally lost. In other words, saying C<local */>
919will not have any effect on the internal value of the input record
920separator.
921
325192b1 922=head3 Localization of elements of composite types
d74e8afc 923X<local, composite type element> X<local, array element> X<local, hash element>
3e3baf6d 924
6ee623d5 925It's also worth taking a moment to explain what happens when you
f86cebdf 926C<local>ize a member of a composite type (i.e. an array or hash element).
b77865f5 927In this case, the element is C<local>ized I<by name>. This means that
6ee623d5
GS
928when the scope of the C<local()> ends, the saved value will be
929restored to the hash element whose key was named in the C<local()>, or
930the array element whose index was named in the C<local()>. If that
931element was deleted while the C<local()> was in effect (e.g. by a
932C<delete()> from a hash or a C<shift()> of an array), it will spring
933back into existence, possibly extending an array and filling in the
934skipped elements with C<undef>. For instance, if you say
935
936 %hash = ( 'This' => 'is', 'a' => 'test' );
937 @ary = ( 0..5 );
938 {
939 local($ary[5]) = 6;
940 local($hash{'a'}) = 'drill';
941 while (my $e = pop(@ary)) {
942 print "$e . . .\n";
943 last unless $e > 3;
944 }
945 if (@ary) {
946 $hash{'only a'} = 'test';
947 delete $hash{'a'};
948 }
949 }
950 print join(' ', map { "$_ $hash{$_}" } sort keys %hash),".\n";
951 print "The array has ",scalar(@ary)," elements: ",
952 join(', ', map { defined $_ ? $_ : 'undef' } @ary),"\n";
953
954Perl will print
955
956 6 . . .
957 4 . . .
958 3 . . .
959 This is a test only a test.
960 The array has 6 elements: 0, 1, 2, undef, undef, 5
961
19799a22 962The behavior of local() on non-existent members of composite
7185e5cc
GS
963types is subject to change in future.
964
d361fafa
VP
965=head3 Localized deletion of elements of composite types
966X<delete> X<local, composite type element> X<local, array element> X<local, hash element>
967
968You can use the C<delete local $array[$idx]> and C<delete local $hash{key}>
969constructs to delete a composite type entry for the current block and restore
b77865f5 970it when it ends. They return the array/hash value before the localization,
d361fafa
VP
971which means that they are respectively equivalent to
972
973 do {
974 my $val = $array[$idx];
975 local $array[$idx];
976 delete $array[$idx];
977 $val
978 }
979
980and
981
982 do {
983 my $val = $hash{key};
984 local $hash{key};
985 delete $hash{key};
986 $val
987 }
988
b77865f5
FC
989except that for those the C<local> is
990scoped to the C<do> block. Slices are
d361fafa
VP
991also accepted.
992
993 my %hash = (
994 a => [ 7, 8, 9 ],
995 b => 1,
996 )
997
998 {
999 my $a = delete local $hash{a};
1000 # $a is [ 7, 8, 9 ]
1001 # %hash is (b => 1)
1002
1003 {
1004 my @nums = delete local @$a[0, 2]
1005 # @nums is (7, 9)
1006 # $a is [ undef, 8 ]
1007
1008 $a[0] = 999; # will be erased when the scope ends
1009 }
1010 # $a is back to [ 7, 8, 9 ]
1011
1012 }
1013 # %hash is back to its original state
1014
cd06dffe 1015=head2 Lvalue subroutines
d74e8afc 1016X<lvalue> X<subroutine, lvalue>
cd06dffe 1017
cd06dffe
GS
1018It is possible to return a modifiable value from a subroutine.
1019To do this, you have to declare the subroutine to return an lvalue.
1020
1021 my $val;
1022 sub canmod : lvalue {
4a904372 1023 $val; # or: return $val;
cd06dffe
GS
1024 }
1025 sub nomod {
1026 $val;
1027 }
1028
1029 canmod() = 5; # assigns to $val
1030 nomod() = 5; # ERROR
1031
1032The scalar/list context for the subroutine and for the right-hand
1033side of assignment is determined as if the subroutine call is replaced
b77865f5 1034by a scalar. For example, consider:
cd06dffe
GS
1035
1036 data(2,3) = get_data(3,4);
1037
1038Both subroutines here are called in a scalar context, while in:
1039
1040 (data(2,3)) = get_data(3,4);
1041
1042and in:
1043
1044 (data(2),data(3)) = get_data(3,4);
1045
1046all the subroutines are called in a list context.
1047
771cc755 1048Lvalue subroutines are convenient, but you have to keep in mind that,
b77865f5 1049when used with objects, they may violate encapsulation. A normal
771cc755 1050mutator can check the supplied argument before setting the attribute
b77865f5 1051it is protecting, an lvalue subroutine cannot. If you require any
771cc755
JV
1052special processing when storing and retrieving the values, consider
1053using the CPAN module Sentinel or something similar.
e6a32221 1054
ca40957e
FC
1055=head2 Lexical Subroutines
1056X<my sub> X<state sub> X<our sub> X<subroutine, lexical>
1057
441078c2
FC
1058B<WARNING>: Lexical subroutines are still experimental. The feature may be
1059modified or removed in future versions of Perl.
ca40957e
FC
1060
1061Lexical subroutines are only available under the C<use feature
1062'lexical_subs'> pragma, which produces a warning unless the
f1d34ca8 1063"experimental::lexical_subs" warnings category is disabled.
ca40957e
FC
1064
1065Beginning with Perl 5.18, you can declare a private subroutine with C<my>
1066or C<state>. As with state variables, the C<state> keyword is only
1067available under C<use feature 'state'> or C<use 5.010> or higher.
1068
1069These subroutines are only visible within the block in which they are
1070declared, and only after that declaration:
1071
f1d34ca8 1072 no warnings "experimental::lexical_subs";
ca40957e
FC
1073 use feature 'lexical_subs';
1074
1075 foo(); # calls the package/global subroutine
1076 state sub foo {
1077 foo(); # also calls the package subroutine
1078 }
1079 foo(); # calls "state" sub
1080 my $ref = \&foo; # take a reference to "state" sub
1081
1082 my sub bar { ... }
1083 bar(); # calls "my" sub
1084
1085To use a lexical subroutine from inside the subroutine itself, you must
1086predeclare it. The C<sub foo {...}> subroutine definition syntax respects
1087any previous C<my sub;> or C<state sub;> declaration.
1088
1089 my sub baz; # predeclaration
1090 sub baz { # define the "my" sub
1091 baz(); # recursive call
1092 }
1093
1094=head3 C<state sub> vs C<my sub>
1095
1096What is the difference between "state" subs and "my" subs? Each time that
1097execution enters a block when "my" subs are declared, a new copy of each
1098sub is created. "State" subroutines persist from one execution of the
1099containing block to the next.
1100
1101So, in general, "state" subroutines are faster. But "my" subs are
1102necessary if you want to create closures:
1103
f1d34ca8 1104 no warnings "experimental::lexical_subs";
ca40957e
FC
1105 use feature 'lexical_subs';
1106
1107 sub whatever {
1108 my $x = shift;
1109 my sub inner {
1110 ... do something with $x ...
1111 }
1112 inner();
1113 }
1114
1115In this example, a new C<$x> is created when C<whatever> is called, and
1116also a new C<inner>, which can see the new C<$x>. A "state" sub will only
1117see the C<$x> from the first call to C<whatever>.
1118
1119=head3 C<our> subroutines
1120
1121Like C<our $variable>, C<our sub> creates a lexical alias to the package
1122subroutine of the same name.
1123
1124The two main uses for this are to switch back to using the package sub
1125inside an inner scope:
1126
f1d34ca8 1127 no warnings "experimental::lexical_subs";
ca40957e
FC
1128 use feature 'lexical_subs';
1129
1130 sub foo { ... }
1131
1132 sub bar {
1133 my sub foo { ... }
1134 {
1135 # need to use the outer foo here
1136 our sub foo;
1137 foo();
1138 }
1139 }
1140
1141and to make a subroutine visible to other packages in the same scope:
1142
1143 package MySneakyModule;
1144
f1d34ca8 1145 no warnings "experimental::lexical_subs";
ca40957e
FC
1146 use feature 'lexical_subs';
1147
1148 our sub do_something { ... }
1149
1150 sub do_something_with_caller {
1151 package DB;
1152 () = caller 1; # sets @DB::args
1153 do_something(@args); # uses MySneakyModule::do_something
1154 }
1155
cb1a09d0 1156=head2 Passing Symbol Table Entries (typeglobs)
d74e8afc 1157X<typeglob> X<*>
cb1a09d0 1158
19799a22
GS
1159B<WARNING>: The mechanism described in this section was originally
1160the only way to simulate pass-by-reference in older versions of
1161Perl. While it still works fine in modern versions, the new reference
1162mechanism is generally easier to work with. See below.
a0d0e21e
LW
1163
1164Sometimes you don't want to pass the value of an array to a subroutine
1165but rather the name of it, so that the subroutine can modify the global
1166copy of it rather than working with a local copy. In perl you can
cb1a09d0 1167refer to all objects of a particular name by prefixing the name
5f05dabc 1168with a star: C<*foo>. This is often known as a "typeglob", because the
a0d0e21e
LW
1169star on the front can be thought of as a wildcard match for all the
1170funny prefix characters on variables and subroutines and such.
1171
55497cff 1172When evaluated, the typeglob produces a scalar value that represents
5f05dabc 1173all the objects of that name, including any filehandle, format, or
a0d0e21e 1174subroutine. When assigned to, it causes the name mentioned to refer to
19799a22 1175whatever C<*> value was assigned to it. Example:
a0d0e21e
LW
1176
1177 sub doubleary {
1178 local(*someary) = @_;
1179 foreach $elem (@someary) {
1180 $elem *= 2;
1181 }
1182 }
1183 doubleary(*foo);
1184 doubleary(*bar);
1185
19799a22 1186Scalars are already passed by reference, so you can modify
a0d0e21e 1187scalar arguments without using this mechanism by referring explicitly
1fef88e7 1188to C<$_[0]> etc. You can modify all the elements of an array by passing
f86cebdf
GS
1189all the elements as scalars, but you have to use the C<*> mechanism (or
1190the equivalent reference mechanism) to C<push>, C<pop>, or change the size of
a0d0e21e
LW
1191an array. It will certainly be faster to pass the typeglob (or reference).
1192
1193Even if you don't want to modify an array, this mechanism is useful for
5f05dabc 1194passing multiple arrays in a single LIST, because normally the LIST
a0d0e21e 1195mechanism will merge all the array values so that you can't extract out
55497cff 1196the individual arrays. For more on typeglobs, see
2ae324a7 1197L<perldata/"Typeglobs and Filehandles">.
cb1a09d0 1198
5a964f20 1199=head2 When to Still Use local()
d74e8afc 1200X<local> X<variable, local>
5a964f20 1201
19799a22
GS
1202Despite the existence of C<my>, there are still three places where the
1203C<local> operator still shines. In fact, in these three places, you
5a964f20
TC
1204I<must> use C<local> instead of C<my>.
1205
13a2d996 1206=over 4
5a964f20 1207
551e1d92
RB
1208=item 1.
1209
1210You need to give a global variable a temporary value, especially $_.
5a964f20 1211
f86cebdf
GS
1212The global variables, like C<@ARGV> or the punctuation variables, must be
1213C<local>ized with C<local()>. This block reads in F</etc/motd>, and splits
5a964f20 1214it up into chunks separated by lines of equal signs, which are placed
f86cebdf 1215in C<@Fields>.
5a964f20
TC
1216
1217 {
1218 local @ARGV = ("/etc/motd");
1219 local $/ = undef;
1220 local $_ = <>;
1221 @Fields = split /^\s*=+\s*$/;
1222 }
1223
19799a22 1224It particular, it's important to C<local>ize $_ in any routine that assigns
5a964f20
TC
1225to it. Look out for implicit assignments in C<while> conditionals.
1226
551e1d92
RB
1227=item 2.
1228
1229You need to create a local file or directory handle or a local function.
5a964f20 1230
09bef843
SB
1231A function that needs a filehandle of its own must use
1232C<local()> on a complete typeglob. This can be used to create new symbol
5a964f20
TC
1233table entries:
1234
1235 sub ioqueue {
1236 local (*READER, *WRITER); # not my!
17b63f68 1237 pipe (READER, WRITER) or die "pipe: $!";
5a964f20
TC
1238 return (*READER, *WRITER);
1239 }
1240 ($head, $tail) = ioqueue();
1241
1242See the Symbol module for a way to create anonymous symbol table
1243entries.
1244
1245Because assignment of a reference to a typeglob creates an alias, this
1246can be used to create what is effectively a local function, or at least,
1247a local alias.
1248
1249 {
4a46e268 1250 local *grow = \&shrink; # only until this block exits
555bd962
BG
1251 grow(); # really calls shrink()
1252 move(); # if move() grow()s, it shrink()s too
5a964f20 1253 }
555bd962 1254 grow(); # get the real grow() again
5a964f20
TC
1255
1256See L<perlref/"Function Templates"> for more about manipulating
1257functions by name in this way.
1258
551e1d92
RB
1259=item 3.
1260
1261You want to temporarily change just one element of an array or hash.
5a964f20 1262
f86cebdf 1263You can C<local>ize just one element of an aggregate. Usually this
5a964f20
TC
1264is done on dynamics:
1265
1266 {
1267 local $SIG{INT} = 'IGNORE';
1268 funct(); # uninterruptible
1269 }
1270 # interruptibility automatically restored here
1271
9d42615f 1272But it also works on lexically declared aggregates.
5a964f20
TC
1273
1274=back
1275
cb1a09d0 1276=head2 Pass by Reference
d74e8afc 1277X<pass by reference> X<pass-by-reference> X<reference>
cb1a09d0 1278
55497cff 1279If you want to pass more than one array or hash into a function--or
1280return them from it--and have them maintain their integrity, then
1281you're going to have to use an explicit pass-by-reference. Before you
1282do that, you need to understand references as detailed in L<perlref>.
c07a80fd 1283This section may not make much sense to you otherwise.
cb1a09d0 1284
19799a22
GS
1285Here are a few simple examples. First, let's pass in several arrays
1286to a function and have it C<pop> all of then, returning a new list
1287of all their former last elements:
cb1a09d0
AD
1288
1289 @tailings = popmany ( \@a, \@b, \@c, \@d );
1290
1291 sub popmany {
1292 my $aref;
1293 my @retlist = ();
1294 foreach $aref ( @_ ) {
1295 push @retlist, pop @$aref;
54310121 1296 }
cb1a09d0 1297 return @retlist;
54310121 1298 }
cb1a09d0 1299
54310121 1300Here's how you might write a function that returns a
cb1a09d0
AD
1301list of keys occurring in all the hashes passed to it:
1302
54310121 1303 @common = inter( \%foo, \%bar, \%joe );
cb1a09d0
AD
1304 sub inter {
1305 my ($k, $href, %seen); # locals
1306 foreach $href (@_) {
1307 while ( $k = each %$href ) {
1308 $seen{$k}++;
54310121 1309 }
1310 }
cb1a09d0 1311 return grep { $seen{$_} == @_ } keys %seen;
54310121 1312 }
cb1a09d0 1313
5f05dabc 1314So far, we're using just the normal list return mechanism.
54310121 1315What happens if you want to pass or return a hash? Well,
1316if you're using only one of them, or you don't mind them
cb1a09d0 1317concatenating, then the normal calling convention is ok, although
54310121 1318a little expensive.
cb1a09d0
AD
1319
1320Where people get into trouble is here:
1321
1322 (@a, @b) = func(@c, @d);
1323or
1324 (%a, %b) = func(%c, %d);
1325
19799a22
GS
1326That syntax simply won't work. It sets just C<@a> or C<%a> and
1327clears the C<@b> or C<%b>. Plus the function didn't get passed
1328into two separate arrays or hashes: it got one long list in C<@_>,
1329as always.
cb1a09d0
AD
1330
1331If you can arrange for everyone to deal with this through references, it's
1332cleaner code, although not so nice to look at. Here's a function that
1333takes two array references as arguments, returning the two array elements
1334in order of how many elements they have in them:
1335
1336 ($aref, $bref) = func(\@c, \@d);
1337 print "@$aref has more than @$bref\n";
1338 sub func {
1339 my ($cref, $dref) = @_;
1340 if (@$cref > @$dref) {
1341 return ($cref, $dref);
1342 } else {
c07a80fd 1343 return ($dref, $cref);
54310121 1344 }
1345 }
cb1a09d0
AD
1346
1347It turns out that you can actually do this also:
1348
1349 (*a, *b) = func(\@c, \@d);
1350 print "@a has more than @b\n";
1351 sub func {
1352 local (*c, *d) = @_;
1353 if (@c > @d) {
1354 return (\@c, \@d);
1355 } else {
1356 return (\@d, \@c);
54310121 1357 }
1358 }
cb1a09d0
AD
1359
1360Here we're using the typeglobs to do symbol table aliasing. It's
19799a22 1361a tad subtle, though, and also won't work if you're using C<my>
09bef843 1362variables, because only globals (even in disguise as C<local>s)
19799a22 1363are in the symbol table.
5f05dabc 1364
1365If you're passing around filehandles, you could usually just use the bare
19799a22
GS
1366typeglob, like C<*STDOUT>, but typeglobs references work, too.
1367For example:
5f05dabc 1368
1369 splutter(\*STDOUT);
1370 sub splutter {
1371 my $fh = shift;
1372 print $fh "her um well a hmmm\n";
1373 }
1374
1375 $rec = get_rec(\*STDIN);
1376 sub get_rec {
1377 my $fh = shift;
1378 return scalar <$fh>;
1379 }
1380
19799a22
GS
1381If you're planning on generating new filehandles, you could do this.
1382Notice to pass back just the bare *FH, not its reference.
5f05dabc 1383
1384 sub openit {
19799a22 1385 my $path = shift;
5f05dabc 1386 local *FH;
e05a3a1e 1387 return open (FH, $path) ? *FH : undef;
54310121 1388 }
5f05dabc 1389
cb1a09d0 1390=head2 Prototypes
d74e8afc 1391X<prototype> X<subroutine, prototype>
cb1a09d0 1392
19799a22 1393Perl supports a very limited kind of compile-time argument checking
eedb00fa
PM
1394using function prototyping. This can be declared in either the PROTO
1395section or with a L<prototype attribute|attributes/Built-in Attributes>.
30d9c59b 1396If you declare either of
cb1a09d0 1397
cba5a3b0 1398 sub mypush (+@)
30d9c59b
Z
1399 sub mypush :prototype(+@)
1400
1401then C<mypush()> takes arguments exactly like C<push()> does.
1402
1403If subroutine signatures are enabled (see L</Signatures>), then
1404the shorter PROTO syntax is unavailable, because it would clash with
1405signatures. In that case, a prototype can only be declared in the form
1406of an attribute.
cb1a09d0 1407
30d9c59b 1408The
19799a22
GS
1409function declaration must be visible at compile time. The prototype
1410affects only interpretation of new-style calls to the function,
1411where new-style is defined as not using the C<&> character. In
1412other words, if you call it like a built-in function, then it behaves
1413like a built-in function. If you call it like an old-fashioned
1414subroutine, then it behaves like an old-fashioned subroutine. It
1415naturally falls out from this rule that prototypes have no influence
1416on subroutine references like C<\&foo> or on indirect subroutine
c47ff5f1 1417calls like C<&{$subref}> or C<< $subref->() >>.
c07a80fd 1418
1419Method calls are not influenced by prototypes either, because the
19799a22
GS
1420function to be called is indeterminate at compile time, since
1421the exact code called depends on inheritance.
cb1a09d0 1422
19799a22
GS
1423Because the intent of this feature is primarily to let you define
1424subroutines that work like built-in functions, here are prototypes
1425for some other functions that parse almost exactly like the
1426corresponding built-in.
cb1a09d0 1427
555bd962
BG
1428 Declared as Called as
1429
1430 sub mylink ($$) mylink $old, $new
1431 sub myvec ($$$) myvec $var, $offset, 1
1432 sub myindex ($$;$) myindex &getstring, "substr"
1433 sub mysyswrite ($$$;$) mysyswrite $buf, 0, length($buf) - $off, $off
1434 sub myreverse (@) myreverse $a, $b, $c
1435 sub myjoin ($@) myjoin ":", $a, $b, $c
1436 sub mypop (+) mypop @array
1437 sub mysplice (+$$@) mysplice @array, 0, 2, @pushme
1438 sub mykeys (+) mykeys %{$hashref}
1439 sub myopen (*;$) myopen HANDLE, $name
1440 sub mypipe (**) mypipe READHANDLE, WRITEHANDLE
1441 sub mygrep (&@) mygrep { /foo/ } $a, $b, $c
1442 sub myrand (;$) myrand 42
1443 sub mytime () mytime
cb1a09d0 1444
c07a80fd 1445Any backslashed prototype character represents an actual argument
ae7a3cfa 1446that must start with that character (optionally preceded by C<my>,
b91b7d1a
FC
1447C<our> or C<local>), with the exception of C<$>, which will
1448accept any scalar lvalue expression, such as C<$foo = 7> or
b77865f5 1449C<< my_function()->[0] >>. The value passed as part of C<@_> will be a
ae7a3cfa
FC
1450reference to the actual argument given in the subroutine call,
1451obtained by applying C<\> to that argument.
c07a80fd 1452
c035a075 1453You can use the C<\[]> backslash group notation to specify more than one
b77865f5 1454allowed argument type. For example:
5b794e05
JH
1455
1456 sub myref (\[$@%&*])
1457
1458will allow calling myref() as
1459
1460 myref $var
1461 myref @array
1462 myref %hash
1463 myref &sub
1464 myref *glob
1465
1466and the first argument of myref() will be a reference to
1467a scalar, an array, a hash, a code, or a glob.
1468
c07a80fd 1469Unbackslashed prototype characters have special meanings. Any
19799a22 1470unbackslashed C<@> or C<%> eats all remaining arguments, and forces
f86cebdf
GS
1471list context. An argument represented by C<$> forces scalar context. An
1472C<&> requires an anonymous subroutine, which, if passed as the first
0df79f0c
GS
1473argument, does not require the C<sub> keyword or a subsequent comma.
1474
1475A C<*> allows the subroutine to accept a bareword, constant, scalar expression,
648ca4f7
GS
1476typeglob, or a reference to a typeglob in that slot. The value will be
1477available to the subroutine either as a simple scalar, or (in the latter
0df79f0c
GS
1478two cases) as a reference to the typeglob. If you wish to always convert
1479such arguments to a typeglob reference, use Symbol::qualify_to_ref() as
1480follows:
1481
1482 use Symbol 'qualify_to_ref';
1483
1484 sub foo (*) {
1485 my $fh = qualify_to_ref(shift, caller);
1486 ...
1487 }
c07a80fd 1488
c035a075
DG
1489The C<+> prototype is a special alternative to C<$> that will act like
1490C<\[@%]> when given a literal array or hash variable, but will otherwise
1491force scalar context on the argument. This is useful for functions which
1492should accept either a literal array or an array reference as the argument:
1493
cba5a3b0 1494 sub mypush (+@) {
c035a075
DG
1495 my $aref = shift;
1496 die "Not an array or arrayref" unless ref $aref eq 'ARRAY';
1497 push @$aref, @_;
1498 }
1499
1500When using the C<+> prototype, your function must check that the argument
1501is of an acceptable type.
1502
859a4967 1503A semicolon (C<;>) separates mandatory arguments from optional arguments.
19799a22 1504It is redundant before C<@> or C<%>, which gobble up everything else.
cb1a09d0 1505
34daab0f
RGS
1506As the last character of a prototype, or just before a semicolon, a C<@>
1507or a C<%>, you can use C<_> in place of C<$>: if this argument is not
1508provided, C<$_> will be used instead.
859a4967 1509
19799a22
GS
1510Note how the last three examples in the table above are treated
1511specially by the parser. C<mygrep()> is parsed as a true list
1512operator, C<myrand()> is parsed as a true unary operator with unary
1513precedence the same as C<rand()>, and C<mytime()> is truly without
1514arguments, just like C<time()>. That is, if you say
cb1a09d0
AD
1515
1516 mytime +2;
1517
f86cebdf 1518you'll get C<mytime() + 2>, not C<mytime(2)>, which is how it would be parsed
3a8944db
FC
1519without a prototype. If you want to force a unary function to have the
1520same precedence as a list operator, add C<;> to the end of the prototype:
1521
1522 sub mygetprotobynumber($;);
1523 mygetprotobynumber $a > $b; # parsed as mygetprotobynumber($a > $b)
cb1a09d0 1524
19799a22
GS
1525The interesting thing about C<&> is that you can generate new syntax with it,
1526provided it's in the initial position:
d74e8afc 1527X<&>
cb1a09d0 1528
6d28dffb 1529 sub try (&@) {
cb1a09d0
AD
1530 my($try,$catch) = @_;
1531 eval { &$try };
1532 if ($@) {
1533 local $_ = $@;
1534 &$catch;
1535 }
1536 }
55497cff 1537 sub catch (&) { $_[0] }
cb1a09d0
AD
1538
1539 try {
1540 die "phooey";
1541 } catch {
1542 /phooey/ and print "unphooey\n";
1543 };
1544
f86cebdf 1545That prints C<"unphooey">. (Yes, there are still unresolved
19799a22 1546issues having to do with visibility of C<@_>. I'm ignoring that
f86cebdf 1547question for the moment. (But note that if we make C<@_> lexically
cb1a09d0 1548scoped, those anonymous subroutines can act like closures... (Gee,
5f05dabc 1549is this sounding a little Lispish? (Never mind.))))
cb1a09d0 1550
19799a22 1551And here's a reimplementation of the Perl C<grep> operator:
d74e8afc 1552X<grep>
cb1a09d0
AD
1553
1554 sub mygrep (&@) {
1555 my $code = shift;
1556 my @result;
1557 foreach $_ (@_) {
6e47f808 1558 push(@result, $_) if &$code;
cb1a09d0
AD
1559 }
1560 @result;
1561 }
a0d0e21e 1562
cb1a09d0
AD
1563Some folks would prefer full alphanumeric prototypes. Alphanumerics have
1564been intentionally left out of prototypes for the express purpose of
1565someday in the future adding named, formal parameters. The current
1566mechanism's main goal is to let module writers provide better diagnostics
1567for module users. Larry feels the notation quite understandable to Perl
1568programmers, and that it will not intrude greatly upon the meat of the
1569module, nor make it harder to read. The line noise is visually
1570encapsulated into a small pill that's easy to swallow.
1571
420cdfc1
ST
1572If you try to use an alphanumeric sequence in a prototype you will
1573generate an optional warning - "Illegal character in prototype...".
1574Unfortunately earlier versions of Perl allowed the prototype to be
1575used as long as its prefix was a valid prototype. The warning may be
1576upgraded to a fatal error in a future version of Perl once the
1577majority of offending code is fixed.
1578
cb1a09d0
AD
1579It's probably best to prototype new functions, not retrofit prototyping
1580into older ones. That's because you must be especially careful about
1581silent impositions of differing list versus scalar contexts. For example,
1582if you decide that a function should take just one parameter, like this:
1583
1584 sub func ($) {
1585 my $n = shift;
1586 print "you gave me $n\n";
54310121 1587 }
cb1a09d0
AD
1588
1589and someone has been calling it with an array or expression
1590returning a list:
1591
1592 func(@foo);
1593 func( split /:/ );
1594
19799a22 1595Then you've just supplied an automatic C<scalar> in front of their
f86cebdf 1596argument, which can be more than a bit surprising. The old C<@foo>
cb1a09d0 1597which used to hold one thing doesn't get passed in. Instead,
19799a22
GS
1598C<func()> now gets passed in a C<1>; that is, the number of elements
1599in C<@foo>. And the C<split> gets called in scalar context so it
1600starts scribbling on your C<@_> parameter list. Ouch!
cb1a09d0 1601
eb40d2ca
PM
1602If a sub has both a PROTO and a BLOCK, the prototype is not applied
1603until after the BLOCK is completely defined. This means that a recursive
1604function with a prototype has to be predeclared for the prototype to take
1605effect, like so:
1606
1607 sub foo($$);
1608 sub foo($$) {
1609 foo 1, 2;
1610 }
1611
5f05dabc 1612This is all very powerful, of course, and should be used only in moderation
54310121 1613to make the world a better place.
44a8e56a 1614
1615=head2 Constant Functions
d74e8afc 1616X<constant>
44a8e56a 1617
1618Functions with a prototype of C<()> are potential candidates for
19799a22
GS
1619inlining. If the result after optimization and constant folding
1620is either a constant or a lexically-scoped scalar which has no other
54310121 1621references, then it will be used in place of function calls made
19799a22
GS
1622without C<&>. Calls made using C<&> are never inlined. (See
1623F<constant.pm> for an easy way to declare most constants.)
44a8e56a 1624
5a964f20 1625The following functions would all be inlined:
44a8e56a 1626
699e6cd4
TP
1627 sub pi () { 3.14159 } # Not exact, but close.
1628 sub PI () { 4 * atan2 1, 1 } # As good as it gets,
1629 # and it's inlined, too!
44a8e56a 1630 sub ST_DEV () { 0 }
1631 sub ST_INO () { 1 }
1632
1633 sub FLAG_FOO () { 1 << 8 }
1634 sub FLAG_BAR () { 1 << 9 }
1635 sub FLAG_MASK () { FLAG_FOO | FLAG_BAR }
54310121 1636
1637 sub OPT_BAZ () { not (0x1B58 & FLAG_MASK) }
88267271
PZ
1638
1639 sub N () { int(OPT_BAZ) / 3 }
1640
1641 sub FOO_SET () { 1 if FLAG_MASK & FLAG_FOO }
d3c633ba 1642 sub FOO_SET2 () { if (FLAG_MASK & FLAG_FOO) { 1 } }
88267271 1643
d3c633ba
FC
1644(Be aware that the last example was not always inlined in Perl 5.20 and
1645earlier, which did not behave consistently with subroutines containing
1646inner scopes.) You can countermand inlining by using an explicit
1647C<return>:
88267271
PZ
1648
1649 sub baz_val () {
44a8e56a 1650 if (OPT_BAZ) {
1651 return 23;
1652 }
1653 else {
1654 return 42;
1655 }
1656 }
d3c633ba 1657 sub bonk_val () { return 12345 }
cb1a09d0 1658
fe39f0d5
AB
1659As alluded to earlier you can also declare inlined subs dynamically at
1660BEGIN time if their body consists of a lexically-scoped scalar which
b77865f5 1661has no other references. Only the first example here will be inlined:
fe39f0d5
AB
1662
1663 BEGIN {
1664 my $var = 1;
1665 no strict 'refs';
1666 *INLINED = sub () { $var };
1667 }
1668
1669 BEGIN {
1670 my $var = 1;
1671 my $ref = \$var;
1672 no strict 'refs';
1673 *NOT_INLINED = sub () { $var };
1674 }
1675
1676A not so obvious caveat with this (see [RT #79908]) is that the
1677variable will be immediately inlined, and will stop behaving like a
1678normal lexical variable, e.g. this will print C<79907>, not C<79908>:
1679
1680 BEGIN {
1681 my $x = 79907;
1682 *RT_79908 = sub () { $x };
1683 $x++;
1684 }
1685 print RT_79908(); # prints 79907
1686
d3c633ba
FC
1687As of Perl 5.22, this buggy behavior, while preserved for backward
1688compatibility, is detected and emits a deprecation warning. If you want
1689the subroutine to be inlined (with no warning), make sure the variable is
1690not used in a context where it could be modified aside from where it is
1691declared.
1692
1693 # Fine, no warning
1694 BEGIN {
1695 my $x = 54321;
1696 *INLINED = sub () { $x };
1697 }
1698 # Warns. Future Perl versions will stop inlining it.
1699 BEGIN {
1700 my $x;
1701 $x = 54321;
1702 *ALSO_INLINED = sub () { $x };
1703 }
1704
fe39f0d5
AB
1705If you really want a subroutine with a C<()> prototype that returns a
1706lexical variable you can easily force it to not be inlined by adding
1707an explicit C<return>:
1708
1709 BEGIN {
1710 my $x = 79907;
1711 *RT_79908 = sub () { return $x };
1712 $x++;
1713 }
1714 print RT_79908(); # prints 79908
1715
1716The easiest way to tell if a subroutine was inlined is by using
d3c633ba 1717L<B::Deparse>. Consider this example of two subroutines returning
fe39f0d5
AB
1718C<1>, one with a C<()> prototype causing it to be inlined, and one
1719without (with deparse output truncated for clarity):
1720
cb07e2f2
KW
1721 $ perl -MO=Deparse -le 'sub ONE { 1 } if (ONE) { print ONE if ONE }'
1722 sub ONE {
1723 1;
1724 }
1725 if (ONE ) {
1726 print ONE() if ONE ;
1727 }
1728 $ perl -MO=Deparse -le 'sub ONE () { 1 } if (ONE) { print ONE if ONE }'
1729 sub ONE () { 1 }
1730 do {
1731 print 1
1732 };
fe39f0d5
AB
1733
1734If you redefine a subroutine that was eligible for inlining, you'll
b77865f5 1735get a warning by default. You can use this warning to tell whether or
fe39f0d5
AB
1736not a particular subroutine is considered inlinable, since it's
1737different than the warning for overriding non-inlined subroutines:
1738
1739 $ perl -e 'sub one () {1} sub one () {2}'
1740 Constant subroutine one redefined at -e line 1.
1741 $ perl -we 'sub one {1} sub one {2}'
1742 Subroutine one redefined at -e line 1.
1743
1744The warning is considered severe enough not to be affected by the
1745B<-w> switch (or its absence) because previously compiled invocations
1746of the function will still be using the old value of the function. If
1747you need to be able to redefine the subroutine, you need to ensure
1748that it isn't inlined, either by dropping the C<()> prototype (which
1749changes calling semantics, so beware) or by thwarting the inlining
d3c633ba
FC
1750mechanism in some other way, e.g. by adding an explicit C<return>, as
1751mentioned above:
fe39f0d5
AB
1752
1753 sub not_inlined () { return 23 }
4cee8e80 1754
19799a22 1755=head2 Overriding Built-in Functions
d74e8afc 1756X<built-in> X<override> X<CORE> X<CORE::GLOBAL>
a0d0e21e 1757
19799a22 1758Many built-in functions may be overridden, though this should be tried
5f05dabc 1759only occasionally and for good reason. Typically this might be
19799a22 1760done by a package attempting to emulate missing built-in functionality
a0d0e21e
LW
1761on a non-Unix system.
1762
163e3a99
JP
1763Overriding may be done only by importing the name from a module at
1764compile time--ordinary predeclaration isn't good enough. However, the
19799a22
GS
1765C<use subs> pragma lets you, in effect, predeclare subs
1766via the import syntax, and these names may then override built-in ones:
a0d0e21e
LW
1767
1768 use subs 'chdir', 'chroot', 'chmod', 'chown';
1769 chdir $somewhere;
1770 sub chdir { ... }
1771
19799a22
GS
1772To unambiguously refer to the built-in form, precede the
1773built-in name with the special package qualifier C<CORE::>. For example,
1774saying C<CORE::open()> always refers to the built-in C<open()>, even
fb73857a 1775if the current package has imported some other subroutine called
19799a22 1776C<&open()> from elsewhere. Even though it looks like a regular
4aaa4757
FC
1777function call, it isn't: the CORE:: prefix in that case is part of Perl's
1778syntax, and works for any keyword, regardless of what is in the CORE
1779package. Taking a reference to it, that is, C<\&CORE::open>, only works
1780for some keywords. See L<CORE>.
fb73857a 1781
19799a22
GS
1782Library modules should not in general export built-in names like C<open>
1783or C<chdir> as part of their default C<@EXPORT> list, because these may
a0d0e21e 1784sneak into someone else's namespace and change the semantics unexpectedly.
19799a22 1785Instead, if the module adds that name to C<@EXPORT_OK>, then it's
a0d0e21e
LW
1786possible for a user to import the name explicitly, but not implicitly.
1787That is, they could say
1788
1789 use Module 'open';
1790
19799a22 1791and it would import the C<open> override. But if they said
a0d0e21e
LW
1792
1793 use Module;
1794
19799a22 1795they would get the default imports without overrides.
a0d0e21e 1796
19799a22 1797The foregoing mechanism for overriding built-in is restricted, quite
95d94a4f 1798deliberately, to the package that requests the import. There is a second
19799a22 1799method that is sometimes applicable when you wish to override a built-in
95d94a4f
GS
1800everywhere, without regard to namespace boundaries. This is achieved by
1801importing a sub into the special namespace C<CORE::GLOBAL::>. Here is an
1802example that quite brazenly replaces the C<glob> operator with something
1803that understands regular expressions.
1804
1805 package REGlob;
1806 require Exporter;
1807 @ISA = 'Exporter';
1808 @EXPORT_OK = 'glob';
1809
1810 sub import {
1811 my $pkg = shift;
1812 return unless @_;
1813 my $sym = shift;
1814 my $where = ($sym =~ s/^GLOBAL_// ? 'CORE::GLOBAL' : caller(0));
1815 $pkg->export($where, $sym, @_);
1816 }
1817
1818 sub glob {
1819 my $pat = shift;
1820 my @got;
7b815c67
RGS
1821 if (opendir my $d, '.') {
1822 @got = grep /$pat/, readdir $d;
1823 closedir $d;
19799a22
GS
1824 }
1825 return @got;
95d94a4f
GS
1826 }
1827 1;
1828
1829And here's how it could be (ab)used:
1830
1831 #use REGlob 'GLOBAL_glob'; # override glob() in ALL namespaces
1832 package Foo;
1833 use REGlob 'glob'; # override glob() in Foo:: only
1834 print for <^[a-z_]+\.pm\$>; # show all pragmatic modules
1835
19799a22 1836The initial comment shows a contrived, even dangerous example.
95d94a4f 1837By overriding C<glob> globally, you would be forcing the new (and
19799a22 1838subversive) behavior for the C<glob> operator for I<every> namespace,
95d94a4f
GS
1839without the complete cognizance or cooperation of the modules that own
1840those namespaces. Naturally, this should be done with extreme caution--if
1841it must be done at all.
1842
1843The C<REGlob> example above does not implement all the support needed to
19799a22 1844cleanly override perl's C<glob> operator. The built-in C<glob> has
95d94a4f 1845different behaviors depending on whether it appears in a scalar or list
19799a22 1846context, but our C<REGlob> doesn't. Indeed, many perl built-in have such
95d94a4f
GS
1847context sensitive behaviors, and these must be adequately supported by
1848a properly written override. For a fully functional example of overriding
1849C<glob>, study the implementation of C<File::DosGlob> in the standard
1850library.
1851
77bc9082
RGS
1852When you override a built-in, your replacement should be consistent (if
1853possible) with the built-in native syntax. You can achieve this by using
1854a suitable prototype. To get the prototype of an overridable built-in,
1855use the C<prototype> function with an argument of C<"CORE::builtin_name">
1856(see L<perlfunc/prototype>).
1857
1858Note however that some built-ins can't have their syntax expressed by a
1859prototype (such as C<system> or C<chomp>). If you override them you won't
1860be able to fully mimic their original syntax.
1861
fe854a6f 1862The built-ins C<do>, C<require> and C<glob> can also be overridden, but due
77bc9082
RGS
1863to special magic, their original syntax is preserved, and you don't have
1864to define a prototype for their replacements. (You can't override the
1865C<do BLOCK> syntax, though).
1866
1867C<require> has special additional dark magic: if you invoke your
1868C<require> replacement as C<require Foo::Bar>, it will actually receive
1869the argument C<"Foo/Bar.pm"> in @_. See L<perlfunc/require>.
1870
1871And, as you'll have noticed from the previous example, if you override
593b9c14 1872C<glob>, the C<< <*> >> glob operator is overridden as well.
77bc9082 1873
9b3023bc 1874In a similar fashion, overriding the C<readline> function also overrides
b77865f5 1875the equivalent I/O operator C<< <FILEHANDLE> >>. Also, overriding
e3f73d4e 1876C<readpipe> also overrides the operators C<``> and C<qx//>.
9b3023bc 1877
fe854a6f 1878Finally, some built-ins (e.g. C<exists> or C<grep>) can't be overridden.
77bc9082 1879
a0d0e21e 1880=head2 Autoloading
d74e8afc 1881X<autoloading> X<AUTOLOAD>
a0d0e21e 1882
19799a22
GS
1883If you call a subroutine that is undefined, you would ordinarily
1884get an immediate, fatal error complaining that the subroutine doesn't
1885exist. (Likewise for subroutines being used as methods, when the
1886method doesn't exist in any base class of the class's package.)
1887However, if an C<AUTOLOAD> subroutine is defined in the package or
1888packages used to locate the original subroutine, then that
1889C<AUTOLOAD> subroutine is called with the arguments that would have
1890been passed to the original subroutine. The fully qualified name
1891of the original subroutine magically appears in the global $AUTOLOAD
1892variable of the same package as the C<AUTOLOAD> routine. The name
1893is not passed as an ordinary argument because, er, well, just
593b9c14 1894because, that's why. (As an exception, a method call to a nonexistent
80ee23cd 1895C<import> or C<unimport> method is just skipped instead. Also, if
5b36e945
FC
1896the AUTOLOAD subroutine is an XSUB, there are other ways to retrieve the
1897subroutine name. See L<perlguts/Autoloading with XSUBs> for details.)
80ee23cd 1898
19799a22
GS
1899
1900Many C<AUTOLOAD> routines load in a definition for the requested
1901subroutine using eval(), then execute that subroutine using a special
1902form of goto() that erases the stack frame of the C<AUTOLOAD> routine
1903without a trace. (See the source to the standard module documented
1904in L<AutoLoader>, for example.) But an C<AUTOLOAD> routine can
1905also just emulate the routine and never define it. For example,
1906let's pretend that a function that wasn't defined should just invoke
1907C<system> with those arguments. All you'd do is:
cb1a09d0
AD
1908
1909 sub AUTOLOAD {
1910 my $program = $AUTOLOAD;
1911 $program =~ s/.*:://;
1912 system($program, @_);
54310121 1913 }
cb1a09d0 1914 date();
6d28dffb 1915 who('am', 'i');
cb1a09d0
AD
1916 ls('-l');
1917
19799a22
GS
1918In fact, if you predeclare functions you want to call that way, you don't
1919even need parentheses:
cb1a09d0
AD
1920
1921 use subs qw(date who ls);
1922 date;
1923 who "am", "i";
593b9c14 1924 ls '-l';
cb1a09d0 1925
13058d67 1926A more complete example of this is the Shell module on CPAN, which
19799a22 1927can treat undefined subroutine calls as calls to external programs.
a0d0e21e 1928
19799a22
GS
1929Mechanisms are available to help modules writers split their modules
1930into autoloadable files. See the standard AutoLoader module
6d28dffb 1931described in L<AutoLoader> and in L<AutoSplit>, the standard
1932SelfLoader modules in L<SelfLoader>, and the document on adding C
19799a22 1933functions to Perl code in L<perlxs>.
cb1a09d0 1934
09bef843 1935=head2 Subroutine Attributes
d74e8afc 1936X<attribute> X<subroutine, attribute> X<attrs>
09bef843
SB
1937
1938A subroutine declaration or definition may have a list of attributes
1939associated with it. If such an attribute list is present, it is
0120eecf 1940broken up at space or colon boundaries and treated as though a
09bef843
SB
1941C<use attributes> had been seen. See L<attributes> for details
1942about what attributes are currently supported.
1943Unlike the limitation with the obsolescent C<use attrs>, the
1944C<sub : ATTRLIST> syntax works to associate the attributes with
1945a pre-declaration, and not just with a subroutine definition.
1946
1947The attributes must be valid as simple identifier names (without any
1948punctuation other than the '_' character). They may have a parameter
1949list appended, which is only checked for whether its parentheses ('(',')')
1950nest properly.
1951
1952Examples of valid syntax (even though the attributes are unknown):
1953
4358a253
SS
1954 sub fnord (&\%) : switch(10,foo(7,3)) : expensive;
1955 sub plugh () : Ugly('\(") :Bad;
09bef843
SB
1956 sub xyzzy : _5x5 { ... }
1957
1958Examples of invalid syntax:
1959
4358a253
SS
1960 sub fnord : switch(10,foo(); # ()-string not balanced
1961 sub snoid : Ugly('('); # ()-string not balanced
1962 sub xyzzy : 5x5; # "5x5" not a valid identifier
1963 sub plugh : Y2::north; # "Y2::north" not a simple identifier
1964 sub snurt : foo + bar; # "+" not a colon or space
09bef843
SB
1965
1966The attribute list is passed as a list of constant strings to the code
1967which associates them with the subroutine. In particular, the second example
1968of valid syntax above currently looks like this in terms of how it's
1969parsed and invoked:
1970
1971 use attributes __PACKAGE__, \&plugh, q[Ugly('\(")], 'Bad';
1972
1973For further details on attribute lists and their manipulation,
a0ae32d3 1974see L<attributes> and L<Attribute::Handlers>.
09bef843 1975
cb1a09d0 1976=head1 SEE ALSO
a0d0e21e 1977
19799a22
GS
1978See L<perlref/"Function Templates"> for more about references and closures.
1979See L<perlxs> if you'd like to learn about calling C subroutines from Perl.
a2293a43 1980See L<perlembed> if you'd like to learn about calling Perl subroutines from C.
19799a22
GS
1981See L<perlmod> to learn about bundling up your functions in separate files.
1982See L<perlmodlib> to learn what library modules come standard on your system.
82e1c0d9 1983See L<perlootut> to learn how to make object method calls.