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scope - Nested subroutines and Scoping in Perl

I'm writing Perl for quite some time now and always discovering new things, and I just ran into something interesting that I don't have the explanation to it, nor found it over the web.

sub a {
   sub b {
     print "In B
";
   }
}
b();

how come I can call b() from outside its scope and it works?

I know its a bad practice to do it, and I dont do it, I use closured and such for these cases, but just saw that.

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Subroutines are stored in a global namespace at compile time. In your example b(); is short hand for main::b();. To limit visibility of a function to a scope you need to assign an anonymous subroutines to a variable.

Both named and anonymous subroutines can form closures, but since named subroutines are only compiled once if you nest them they don't behave as many people expect.

use warnings;
sub one {
    my $var = shift;
    sub two {
        print "var: $var
";
    }
}
one("test");
two();
one("fail");
two();
__END__
output:
Variable "$var" will not stay shared at -e line 5.
var: test
var: test

Nesting named subroutines is allowed in Perl but it's almost certainly a sign that the code is doing someting incorrectly.


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