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author | Rafael Garcia-Suarez <rgarciasuarez@gmail.com> | 2006-09-04 13:12:20 +0000 |
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committer | Rafael Garcia-Suarez <rgarciasuarez@gmail.com> | 2006-09-04 13:12:20 +0000 |
commit | b5d81ce9778c83ecbdeb300709817d34b87951c1 (patch) | |
tree | 46cebdc4c60587a19d05d4ca06a5000cc0a13534 /pod | |
parent | 630ad279b1b5cca7c05f94dc02339df068ae534a (diff) | |
download | perl-b5d81ce9778c83ecbdeb300709817d34b87951c1.tar.gz |
Documentation nit, found by Dr Ruud.
p4raw-id: //depot/perl@28780
Diffstat (limited to 'pod')
-rw-r--r-- | pod/perldsc.pod | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/pod/perldsc.pod b/pod/perldsc.pod index 158322b61c..fd6403b7e7 100644 --- a/pod/perldsc.pod +++ b/pod/perldsc.pod @@ -199,7 +199,7 @@ much harder to read: Is it the same? Well, maybe so--and maybe not. The subtle difference is that when you assign something in square brackets, you know for sure it's always a brand new reference with a new I<copy> of the data. -Something else could be going on in this new case with the C<@{$AoA[$i]}}> +Something else could be going on in this new case with the C<@{$AoA[$i]}> dereference on the left-hand-side of the assignment. It all depends on whether C<$AoA[$i]> had been undefined to start with, or whether it already contained a reference. If you had already populated @AoA with |