Since we have now learned some useful concepts about strings and numbers in Perl, we can consider how to store them in variables. In Perl, both numeric and string values are stored in scalar variables.
Scalar variables are storage areas that you can use to store any scalar value. As we have already discussed, scalar values are strings or numbers, such as the literals that we discussed in previous sections.
You can always identify scalar variables because they are in the form
$NAME
, where NAME
is any string of alphanumeric characters
and underscores starting with a letter, up to 255 characters total.
Note that NAME
will be case sensitive, thus $xyz
is
a different variable than $xYz
.
Note that the first character in the name of any scalar variable must be
$
. All variables that begin with $
are always scalar.
Keep this in mind as you see various expressions in Perl. You can
remember that anything that begins with $
is always scalar.
As we discussed (see A First Perl Program), it is best to always
declare variables with the my
function. You do not need to do
this if you are not using strict
, but you should always use
strict
until you are an experienced Perl programmer.
The first operation we will consider with scalar variables is assignment. Assignment is the way that we give a value from some scalar expression to a scalar variable.
The assignment operator in Perl is =
. On the left hand side of
the =
, we place the scalar variable whose value we wish to
change. On the right side of the =
, we place the scalar
expression. (Note that so far, we have learned about three types of
scalar expressions: string literals, numeric literals, and scalar
variables).
Consider the following code segment:
use strict; my $stuff = "My data"; # Assigns "My data" to variable $stuff $stuff = 3.5e-4; # $stuff is no longer set to "My data"; # it is now 0.00035 my $things = $stuff; # $things is now 0.00035, also.
Let us consider this code more closely. The first line does two
operations. First, using the my
function, it declares the
variable $stuff
. Then, in the same statement, it assigns the
variable $stuff
with the scalar expression, "My data"
.
The next line uses that same variable $stuff
. This time, it is
replacing the value of "My data"
with the numeric value of
0.00035
. Note that it does not matter that $stuff
once
contained string data. We are permitted to change and assign it with a
different type of scalar data.
Finally, we declare a new variable $things
(again, using the
my
function), and use assignment to give it the value of the
scalar expression $stuff
. What does the scalar expression,
$stuff
evaluate to? Simply, it evaluates to whatever scalar
value is held by $stuff
. In this case, that value is
0.00035
.