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Programming Perl, 3rd Edition
book

Programming Perl, 3rd Edition

by Larry Wall, Tom Christiansen, Jon Orwant
July 2000
Intermediate to advanced
1104 pages
35h 1m
English
O'Reilly Media, Inc.
Content preview from Programming Perl, 3rd Edition

Additive Operators

Strangely enough, Perl also has the customary + (addition) and - (subtraction) operators. Both operators convert their arguments from strings to numeric values if necessary and return a numeric result.

Additionally, Perl provides the . operator, which does string concatenation. For example:

$almost = "Fred" . "Flintstone";    # returns FredFlintstone

Note that Perl does not place a space between the strings being concatenated. If you want the space, or if you have more than two strings to concatenate, you can use the join operator, described in Chapter 29. Most often, though, people do their concatenation implicitly inside a double-quoted string:

$fullname = "$firstname $lastname";
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Publisher Resources

ISBN: 0596000278Supplemental ContentErrata