Section 2.10. The undef Value


2.10. The undef Value

What happens if you use a scalar variable before you give it a value? Nothing serious and definitely nothing fatal. Variables have the special undef value before they are first assigned, which is Perl's way of saying "nothing here to look atmove along, move along." If you use this "nothing" as a "numeric something," it will act like zero. If you use it as a "string something," it will act like the empty string. But undef is neither a number nor a string; it's an entirely separate kind of scalar value.

Because undef automatically acts like zero when used as a number, it's easy to make an numeric accumulator that starts out empty:

     # Add up some odd numbers     $n = 1;     while ($n < 10) {       $sum += $n;       $n += 2; # On to the next odd number     }     print "The total was $sum.\n"; 

This works properly when $sum was undef before the loop started. The first time through the loop, $n is one, so the first line inside the loop adds one to $sum. That's like adding 1 to a variable that already holds zero because you're using undef as if it were a number. Now it has the value 1. After that, since it's been initialized, adding works in the traditional way.

Similarly, you could have a string accumulator that starts out empty:

     $string .= "more text\n"; 

If $string is undef, this will act as if it already held the empty string, putting "more text\n" into that variable. But if it holds a string, the new text is appended.

Perl programmers frequently use a new variable in this way, letting it act as zero or the empty string as needed.

Many operators return undef when the arguments are out of range or don't make sense. If you don't do anything special, you'll get a zero or a null string without major consequences. In practice, this is hardly a problem. In fact, most programmers rely upon this behavior. But you should know that when warnings are turned on, Perl will typically warn about unusual uses of the undefined value since that may indicate a bug. For example, copying undef from one variable into another isn't a problem, but trying to print it would generally cause a warning.



Learning Perl
Learning Perl, 5th Edition
ISBN: 0596520107
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2003
Pages: 232

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