Problems? Is your data what you think it is? | |
PerlMonks |
comment on |
( [id://3333]=superdoc: print w/replies, xml ) | Need Help?? |
This is a good question. And I don't know the answer.
I can try to answer where I picked up the notion though. I first saw map and grep actually used in a bad CGI book (whose title I have forgotten), where the author was trying to tell people to write loops like that. I thought the advice was silly, and it didn't take long before I learned enough to realize that the book was bad. Furthermore I noticed that people who were far more experienced than I sometimes criticized people for using map and grep for side-effects, and I filed that away as another fault of the book. When I later saw map and grep being used more appropriately, it was in the context of side-effect free transformations. Not long after that I ran across them in some material that I was reading about Lisp, and about functional languages, which advocated making functions side-effect free for a variety of reasons (mainly more transparent modularity and easier debugging). I took the notion back to my Perl, and began using map and grep fairly consistently, but always with side-effect free blocks. This stylistic choice became a habit, and the habit became an expectation, and that continued with rather little thought about the matter on my part until this week. So I guess that the answer is that the people who chanted against map and grep in void context set my original notions, and then the notion that it was good to actively avoid having them have side-effects came for me from other languages that I was trying to learn about. I doubt that many other Perl programmers who hold my opinion hold it for the same reason though. In reply to Re: Re: Think for yourself.
by tilly
|
|