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1 | ------------- |
2 | Version 5.000 |
3 | ------------- |
4 | |
5 | New things |
6 | ---------- |
7 | The -w switch is much more informative. |
8 | |
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9 | References. See t/op/ref.t for examples. All entities in Perl 5 are |
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10 | reference counted so that it knows when each item should be destroyed. |
11 | |
12 | Objects. See t/op/ref.t for examples. |
13 | |
14 | => is now a synonym for comma. This is useful as documentation for |
15 | arguments that come in pairs, such as initializers for associative arrays, |
16 | or named arguments to a subroutine. |
17 | |
18 | All functions have been turned into list operators or unary operators, |
19 | meaning the parens are optional. Even subroutines may be called as |
20 | list operators if they've already been declared. |
21 | |
22 | More embeddible. See main.c and embed_h.sh. Multiple interpreters |
23 | in the same process are supported (though not with interleaved |
24 | execution yet). |
25 | |
26 | The interpreter is now flattened out. Compare Perl 4's eval.c with |
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27 | the perl 5's pp.c. Compare Perl 4's 900 line interpreter loop in cmd.c |
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28 | with Perl 5's 1 line interpreter loop in run.c. Eventually we'll make |
29 | everything non-blocking so we can interface nicely with a scheduler. |
30 | |
31 | eval is now treated more like a subroutine call. Among other things, |
32 | this means you can return from it. |
33 | |
34 | Format value lists may be spread over multiple lines by enclosing in |
35 | a do {} block. |
36 | |
37 | You may now define BEGIN and END subroutines for each package. The BEGIN |
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38 | subroutine executes the moment it's parsed. The END subroutine executes |
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39 | just before exiting. |
40 | |
41 | Flags on the #! line are interpreted even if the script wasn't |
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42 | executed directly. (And even if the script was located by "perl -x"!) |
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43 | |
44 | The ?: operator is now legal as an lvalue. |
45 | |
46 | List context now propagates to the right side of && and ||, as well |
47 | as the 2nd and 3rd arguments to ?:. |
48 | |
49 | The "defined" function can now take a general expression. |
50 | |
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51 | Lexical scoping available via "my". eval can see the current lexical |
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52 | variables. |
53 | |
54 | The preferred package delimiter is now :: rather than '. |
55 | |
56 | tie/untie are now preferred to dbmopen/dbmclose. Multiple DBM |
57 | implementations are allowed in the same executable, so you can |
58 | write scripts to interchange data among different formats. |
59 | |
60 | New "and" and "or" operators work just like && and || but with |
61 | a precedence lower than comma, so they work better with list operators. |
62 | |
63 | New functions include: abs(), chr(), uc(), ucfirst(), lc(), lcfirst(), |
64 | chomp(), glob() |
65 | |
66 | require with a number checks to see that the version of Perl that is |
67 | currently running is at least that number. |
68 | |
69 | Dynamic loading of external modules is now supported. |
70 | |
71 | There is a new quote form qw//, which is equivalent to split(' ', q//). |
72 | |
73 | Assignment of a reference to a glob value now just replaces the |
74 | single element of the glob corresponding to the reference type: |
75 | *foo = \$bar, *foo = \&bletch; |
76 | |
77 | Filehandle methods are now supported: |
78 | output_autoflush STDOUT 1; |
79 | |
80 | There is now an "English" module that provides human readable translations |
81 | for cryptic variable names. |
82 | |
83 | Autoload stubs can now call the replacement subroutine with goto &realsub. |
84 | |
85 | Subroutines can be defined lazily in any package by declaring an AUTOLOAD |
86 | routine, which will be called if a non-existent subroutine is called in |
87 | that package. |
88 | |
89 | Several previously added features have been subsumed under the new |
90 | keywords "use" and "no". Saying "use Module LIST" is short for |
91 | BEGIN { require Module; import Module LIST; } |
92 | The "no" keyword is identical except that it calls "unimport" instead. |
93 | The earlier pragma mechanism now uses this mechanism, and two new |
94 | modules have been added to the library to implement "use integer" |
95 | and variations of "use strict vars, refs, subs". |
96 | |
97 | Variables may now be interpolated literally into a pattern by prefixing |
98 | them with \Q, which works just like \U, but backwhacks non-alphanumerics |
99 | instead. There is also a corresponding quotemeta function. |
100 | |
101 | Any quantifier in a regular expression may now be followed by a ? to |
102 | indicate that the pattern is supposed to match as little as possible. |
103 | |
104 | Pattern matches may now be followed by an m or s modifier to explicitly |
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105 | request multiline or singleline semantics. An s modifier makes . match |
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106 | newline. |
107 | |
108 | Patterns may now contain \A to match only at the beginning of the string, |
109 | and \Z to match only at the end. These differ from ^ and $ in that |
110 | they ignore multiline semantics. In addition, \G matches where the |
111 | last interation of m//g or s///g left off. |
112 | |
113 | Non-backreference-producing parens of various sorts may now be |
114 | indicated by placing a ? directly after the opening parenthesis, |
115 | followed by a character that indicates the purpose of the parens. |
116 | An :, for instance, indicates simple grouping. (?:a|b|c) will |
117 | match any of a, b or c without producing a backreference. It does |
118 | "eat" the input. There are also assertions which do not eat the |
119 | input but do lookahead for you. (?=stuff) indicates that the next |
120 | thing must be "stuff". (?!nonsense) indicates that the next thing |
121 | must not be "nonsense". |
122 | |
123 | The negation operator now treats non-numeric strings specially. |
124 | A -"text" is turned into "-text", so that -bareword is the same |
125 | as "-bareword". If the string already begins with a + or -, it |
126 | is flipped to the other sign. |
127 | |
128 | Incompatibilities |
129 | ----------------- |
130 | @ now always interpolates an array in double-quotish strings. Some programs |
131 | may now need to use backslash to protect any @ that shouldn't interpolate. |
132 | |
133 | Ordinary variables starting with underscore are no longer forced into |
134 | package main. |
135 | |
136 | s'$lhs'$rhs' now does no interpolation on either side. It used to |
137 | interplolate $lhs but not $rhs. |
138 | |
139 | The second and third arguments of splice are now evaluated in scalar |
140 | context (like the book says) rather than list context. |
141 | |
142 | Saying "shift @foo + 20" is now a semantic error because of precedence. |
143 | |
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144 | "open FOO || die" is now incorrect. You need parens around the filehandle. |
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145 | |
146 | The elements of argument lists for formats are now evaluated in list |
147 | context. This means you can interpolate list values now. |
148 | |
149 | You can't do a goto into a block that is optimized away. Darn. |
150 | |
151 | It is no longer syntactically legal to use whitespace as the name |
152 | of a variable, or as a delimiter for any kind of quote construct. |
153 | |
154 | Some error messages will be different. |
155 | |
156 | The caller function now returns a false value in a scalar context if there |
157 | is no caller. This lets library files determine if they're being required. |
158 | |
159 | m//g now attaches its state to the searched string rather than the |
160 | regular expression. |
161 | |
162 | "reverse" is no longer allowed as the name of a sort subroutine. |
163 | |
164 | taintperl is no longer a separate executable. There is now a -T |
165 | switch to turn on tainting when it isn't turned on automatically. |
166 | |
167 | Symbols starting with _ are no longer forced into package main, except |
168 | for $_ itself (and @_, etc.). |
169 | |
170 | Double-quoted strings may no longer end with an unescaped $ or @. |
171 | |
172 | Negative array subscripts now count from the end of the array. |
173 | |
174 | The comma operator in a scalar context is now guaranteed to give a |
175 | scalar context to its arguments. |
176 | |
177 | The ** operator now binds more tightly than unary minus. |
178 | |
179 | Setting $#array lower now discards array elements so that destructors |
180 | work reasonably. |
181 | |
182 | delete is not guaranteed to return the old value for tied arrays, |
183 | since this capability may be onerous for some modules to implement. |
184 | |
185 | Attempts to set $1 through $9 now result in a run-time error. |