NAME
Perl::Critic::Policy::Community::WhileDiamondDefaultAssignment - Don't use while with implicit assignment to $_
DESCRIPTION
The diamond operator <>
(or <<>>
), and functions readline()
, readdir()
, and each()
are extra magical in a while condition: if it is the only thing in the condition, it will assign its result to $_
, but it does not localize $_
to the while loop. (Note, this also applies to a for (;<>;)
construct.) This can unintentionally confuse outer loops that are already using $_
to iterate. In addition, using $_
at all means that your loop can get confused by other code which does not politely localize its usage of the global variable. To avoid these possibilities, assign the result of the diamond operator or these functions to an explicit lexical variable.
while (<$fh>) { ... } # not ok
while (<<>>) { ... } # not ok
... while <STDIN>; # not ok
for (;<>;) { ... } # not ok
while (readline $fh) { ... } # not ok
while (readdir $dh) { ... } # not ok
while (my $line = <$fh>) { ... } # ok
while (my $line = <<>>) { ... } # ok
... while $line = <STDIN>; # ok
for (;my $line = <>;) { ... } # ok
while (my $line = readline $fh) { ... } # ok
while (my $dir = readdir $dh) { ... } # ok
AFFILIATION
This policy is part of Perl::Critic::Community.
CONFIGURATION
This policy is not configurable except for the standard options.
AUTHOR
Dan Book, dbook@cpan.org
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2015, Dan Book.
This library is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the Artistic License version 2.0.