Question

Running ActiveState Perl 5.10.1 on win32.

How is it that this code:

die(defined($r->unparsed_uri =~ '/(logout.pl)?$'));

...dies with 1, whereas changing the same line to say this:

die($r->unparsed_uri =~ '/(logout.pl)?$');

...dies with Use of uninitialized value in die?

How is it defined yet uninitialized? I thought uninitialized meant undefined.

Was it helpful?

Solution

In the first case, the matching operation is taking place in scalar context. In the second case, it's taking place in array context, almost as if you had written:

my @groups = $r->unparsed_uri =~ '/(logout.pl)?$';
die @groups;

If $r->unparsed_uri matches the pattern, but $1 is undefined because the matched string ended with "/", then @groups will be an array of length 1, containing the single element undef.

Put it all together, it's as if you'd said:

die(undef);

OTHER TIPS

Do you have warnings enabled?

Given

#!/usr/bin/perl -l

use strict; use warnings;

my $uri;

die(defined($uri =~ '/(logout.pl)?$'));

I get

Use of uninitialized value $uri in pattern match (m//) at E:\t.pl line 7.
1 at E:\t.pl line 7.

which explains what is going on.

$uri is not defined, so you get a warning for using that in m//. Because $uri is not defined, the result of the match is false but defined. Hence, defined returns true and die outputs 1.

Licensed under: CC-BY-SA with attribution
Not affiliated with StackOverflow
scroll top