note
crazyinsomniac
Wow, your mind is twisted.
<CODE>
sub blartg {
my $foo = shift;
.
.
.
sub blartg {
my $foo = shift;
my $bar = shift;
my $baz = shift;
...
</CODE>
How does one jump from <CODE>my $something = shift;</CODE> to <CODE>my ($something, $else) = @_; </CODE>? No mention of () or @_ ... that's quite a leap ;D
<P>
What I don't like is refering to @_ directly, as in <CODE> $_[0]</CODE>. I do it sometimes, but by no means do I like it.
<P> <BR><TABLE CELLPADDING=0 CELLSPACING=3 BORDER=0 BGCOLOR="#FFFFFF"><TR><TD><a href="/index.pl?node=crazyinsomniac&lastnode_id=1072"><FONT SIZE=4 COLOR="#333333">______craz<b><i>y</i></b>insomniac_____________________________</a><br><TT><A HREF="http://www.ozzyosbourne.com/"><FONT COLOR="#DDDDDD" SIZE=2>Of all the things I've lost, I miss my mind the most.</A></TT></FONT><BR><A HREF="http://www.divisionbyzero.com/burningman"><FONT COLOR="#999999" SIZE=2><TT>perl -e "$q=$_;map({chr unpack qq;H*;,$_}split(q;;,q*H*));print;$q/$q;" </TT></FONT></A></TD></TR></TABLE>
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