ADC Home > Reference Library > Reference > Mac OS X > Mac OS X Man Pages

 

This document is a Mac OS X manual page. Manual pages are a command-line technology for providing documentation. You can view these manual pages locally using the man(1) command. These manual pages come from many different sources, and thus, have a variety of writing styles.

For more information about the manual page format, see the manual page for manpages(5).



vars(3pm)                             Perl Programmers Reference Guide                             vars(3pm)



NAME
       vars - Perl pragma to predeclare global variable names (obsolete)

SYNOPSIS
           use vars qw($frob @mung %seen);

DESCRIPTION
       NOTE: For variables in the current package, the functionality provided by this pragma has been super-seded superseded
       seded by "our" declarations, available in Perl v5.6.0 or later.  See "our" in perlfunc.

       This will predeclare all the variables whose names are in the list, allowing you to use them under
       "use strict", and disabling any typo warnings.

       Unlike pragmas that affect the $^H hints variable, the "use vars" and "use subs" declarations are not
       BLOCK-scoped.  They are thus effective for the entire file in which they appear.  You may not rescind
       such declarations with "no vars" or "no subs".

       Packages such as the AutoLoader and SelfLoader that delay loading of subroutines within packages can
       create problems with package lexicals defined using "my()". While the vars pragma cannot duplicate
       the effect of package lexicals (total transparency outside of the package), it can act as an accept-able acceptable
       able substitute by pre-declaring global symbols, ensuring their availability to the later-loaded rou-tines. routines.
       tines.

       See "Pragmatic Modules" in perlmodlib.



perl v5.8.8                                      2001-09-21                                        vars(3pm)

Did this document help you?
Yes: Tell us what works for you.
It’s good, but: Report typos, inaccuracies, and so forth.
It wasn’t helpful: Tell us what would have helped.