.rn '' }`
-''' $Header: perl.man,v 4.0 91/03/20 01:38:08 lwall Locked $
+''' $RCSfile: perl.man,v $$Revision: 4.0.1.1 $$Date: 91/04/11 17:50:44 $
'''
''' $Log: perl.man,v $
+''' Revision 4.0.1.1 91/04/11 17:50:44 lwall
+''' patch1: fixed some typos
+'''
''' Revision 4.0 91/03/20 01:38:08 lwall
''' 4.0 baseline.
'''
print "\et" x ($tab/8), \' \' x ($tab%8); # tab over
- @ones = (1) x ; # an array of 80 1's
+ @ones = (1) x 80; # an array of 80 1's
@ones = (5) x @ones; # set all elements to 5
.fi
.fi
''' Beginning of part 2
-''' $Header: perl.man,v 4.0 91/03/20 01:38:08 lwall Locked $
+''' $RCSfile: perl.man,v $$Revision: 4.0.1.1 $$Date: 91/04/11 17:50:44 $
'''
''' $Log: perl.man,v $
+''' Revision 4.0.1.1 91/04/11 17:50:44 lwall
+''' patch1: fixed some typos
+'''
''' Revision 4.0 91/03/20 01:38:08 lwall
''' 4.0 baseline.
'''
size of the message type. Returns true if successful, or false if
there is an error.
''' Beginning of part 3
-''' $Header: perl.man,v 4.0 91/03/20 01:38:08 lwall Locked $
+''' $RCSfile: perl.man,v $$Revision: 4.0.1.1 $$Date: 91/04/11 17:50:44 $
'''
''' $Log: perl.man,v $
+''' Revision 4.0.1.1 91/04/11 17:50:44 lwall
+''' patch1: fixed some typos
+'''
''' Revision 4.0 91/03/20 01:38:08 lwall
''' 4.0 baseline.
'''
.Sp
Note that write is NOT the opposite of read.
''' Beginning of part 4
-''' $Header: perl.man,v 4.0 91/03/20 01:38:08 lwall Locked $
+''' $RCSfile: perl.man,v $$Revision: 4.0.1.1 $$Date: 91/04/11 17:50:44 $
'''
''' $Log: perl.man,v $
+''' Revision 4.0.1.1 91/04/11 17:50:44 lwall
+''' patch1: fixed some typos
+'''
''' Revision 4.0 91/03/20 01:38:08 lwall
''' 4.0 baseline.
'''
If your stdio requires an seek or eof between reads and writes on a particular
stream, so does
.IR perl .
+(This doesn't apply to sysread() and syswrite().)
.PP
While none of the built-in data types have any arbitrary size limits (apart
from memory size), there are still a few arbitrary limits: