diff options
| -rw-r--r-- | perl.html.markdown | 44 | 
1 files changed, 23 insertions, 21 deletions
| diff --git a/perl.html.markdown b/perl.html.markdown index aac95939..ab8c7a32 100644 --- a/perl.html.markdown +++ b/perl.html.markdown @@ -47,9 +47,9 @@ my %fruit_color = ("apple", "red", "banana", "yellow");  #  You can use whitespace and the "=>" operator to lay them out more nicely:  my %fruit_color = ( -        apple  => "red", -        banana => "yellow", -        ); +  apple  => "red", +  banana => "yellow", +);  # Scalars, arrays and hashes are documented more fully in perldata.  # (perldoc perldata). @@ -60,17 +60,17 @@ my %fruit_color = (  # Perl has most of the usual conditional and looping constructs. -if ( $var ) { -    ... -} elsif ( $var eq 'bar' ) { -    ... +if ($var) { +  ... +} elsif ($var eq 'bar') { +  ...  } else { -    ... +  ...  } -unless ( condition ) { -                   ... -               } +unless (condition) { +  ... +}  # This is provided as a more readable version of "if (!condition)"  # the Perlish post-condition way @@ -78,19 +78,19 @@ print "Yow!" if $zippy;  print "We have no bananas" unless $bananas;  #  while -  while ( condition ) { -                   ... -               } +while (condition) { +  ... +}  # for and foreach  for ($i = 0; $i <= $max; $i++) { -                   ... -               } +  ... +}  foreach (@array) { -                   print "This element is $_\n"; -               } +  print "This element is $_\n"; +}  #### Regular expressions @@ -129,9 +129,11 @@ my @lines = <$in>;  # Writing subroutines is easy:  sub logger { -    my $logmessage = shift; -    open my $logfile, ">>", "my.log" or die "Could not open my.log: $!"; -    print $logfile $logmessage; +  my $logmessage = shift; + +  open my $logfile, ">>", "my.log" or die "Could not open my.log: $!"; + +  print $logfile $logmessage;  }  # Now we can use the subroutine just as any other built-in function: | 
