i noticed my HTML::Mason code, after upgrading from potato to woody, started balking at a simple line of code:
my @c = map {s/(.)/$1$1/g; $_} qw(fc0 066 ffc 600 cff 090 ccc 666 fc9 633 cff 096 c9c 090); now, under potato, there was no problem. with woody, i've got "Modification of a read-only value attempted" so i managed to track it down by playing with perl directly (whitespace added for clarity): $ perl -de 1 <snip> DB<1> x map { s/././g; $_} qw/yes no maybe/ Modification of a read-only value attempted at (eval 36)[/usr/share/perl/5.6.1/perl5db.pl:1521] line 2. DB<2> x map {$k = $_; $k =~ s/././g; $k} qw/yes no maybe/ 0 '...' 1 '..' 2 '.....' it'll let me modify $k, but not $_, inside the map code. ($] shows perl to be version 5.006001; and under apache-perl it also appears to be 5.006001). munging $_ is a common practice around these parts. is this a Bad Thing to do? it was okay under potato's perl -- now in woody, suddenly we can't modify "$_" inside a map code segment? argh! "perldoc -f map" shows that $_ is set as an ALIAS to each element in the list; so when it's a constant, it now *points*? to the scalar constant? not a copy, as it was before, apparently... <grr> i suppose i'll have to use a for loop, then. pooh. -- I use Debian/GNU Linux version 3.0; Linux server 2.2.17 #1 Sun Jun 25 09:24:41 EST 2000 i586 unknown DEBIAN NEWBIE TIP #59 from Bob Proulx <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> : Wanting to SYNCHRONIZE YOUR SYSTEM CLOCK periodically? If you think your system clock gathers or loses a few extra seconds each day, you're probably looking for "ntp" which queries several "network time protocol" servers, and sets your system clock accordingly. apt-get install ntp ntp-simple ntp-doc ntpdate then browse /usr/share/doc/ntp-doc/html for info. Also see http://newbieDoc.sourceForge.net/ ... -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]