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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

C Operators Missing from Perl

Here is what C has that Perl doesn't:

unary &

The address-of operator. Perl's \ operator (for taking a reference) fills the same ecological niche, however:

$ref_to_var = \$var;

But Perl references are much safer than C pointers.

unary *

The dereference-address operator. Since Perl doesn't have addresses, it doesn't need to dereference addresses. It does have references though, so Perl's variable prefix characters serve as dereference operators, and indicate type as well: $, @, %, and &. Oddly enough, there actually is a * dereference operator, but since * is the funny character indicating a typeglob, you wouldn't use it the same way.

(TYPE)

The typecasting operator. Nobody likes to be typecast anyway.

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Publisher Resources

ISBN: 0596000278Supplemental ContentErrata