Statements
A simple statement is an expression evaluated for its side effects. Every simple statement must end in a semicolon, unless it is the final statement in a block.
A sequence of statements that defines a scope is called a block. Generally, a block is delimited by braces, or { }
. Compound statements are built out of expressions and blocks. A conditional expression is evaluated to determine whether a statement block will be executed. Compound statements are defined in terms of blocks, not statements, which means that braces are required.
Any block can be given a label. Labels are identifiers that follow the variable-naming rules (i.e., they begin with a letter or underscore, and can contain alphanumerics and underscores). They are placed just before the block and are followed by a colon, like SOMELABEL
here:
SOMELABEL: { ...statements... }
By convention, labels are all uppercase, so as not to conflict with reserved words. Labels are used with the loop-control commands
next
, last
, and redo
to alter the flow of execution in your programs.
Conditionals and Loops
The if
and unless
statements execute blocks of code depending on whether a condition is met. These statements take the following forms:
if (expression) {block} else {block} unless (expression) {block} else {block} if (expression1) {block} elsif (expression2) {block} ... elsif (lastexpression) {block} else {block}
while loops
The while
statement repeatedly executes a block as long as its conditional expression is true. For example:
while (<INFILE>) { print OUTFILE, "$_\n"; }
This loop reads each line from the file opened with the filehandle INFILE and prints them to the OUTFILE filehandle. The loop will cease when it encounters an end-of-file.
If the word while
is replaced by the word until
, the sense of the test is reversed. The conditional is still tested before the first iteration, though.
The while
statement has an optional extra block on the end called a continue
block. This block is executed before every successive iteration of the loop, even if the main while
block is exited early by the loop control command next
. However, the continue
block is not executed if the main block is exited by a last
statement. The continue
block is always executed before the conditional is evaluated again.
for loops
The for
loop has three semicolon-separated expressions within its parentheses. These three expressions function respectively as the initialization, the condition, and the re-initialization expressions of the loop. The for
loop can be defined in terms of the corresponding while
loop:
for ($i = 1; $i < 10; $i++) { ... }
is the same as:
$i = 1; while ($i < 10) { ... } continue { $i++; }
foreach loops
The foreach
loop iterates over a list value and sets the control variable (var
) to be each element of the list in turn:
foreach var (list) { ... }
Like the
while
statement, the foreach
statement can also take a continue
block.
Modifiers
Any simple statement may be followed by a single modifier that gives the statement a conditional or looping mechanism. This syntax provides a simpler and often more elegant method than using the corresponding compound statements. These modifiers are:
statement if EXPR; statement unless EXPR; statement while EXPR; statement until EXPR;
For example:
$i = $num if ($num < 50); # $i will be less than 50 $j = $cnt unless ($cnt < 100); # $j will equal 100 or greater $lines++ while <FILE>; print "$_\n" until /The end/;
The conditional is evaluated first with the
while
and until
modifiers except when applied to a do {}
statement, in which case the block executes once before the conditional is evaluated. For example:
do { $line = <STDIN>; ... } until $line eq ".\n";
For more information on
do
, see Function Reference.
Loop control
You can put a label on a loop to give it a name. The loop's label identifies the loop for the loop-control commands next
, last
, and redo
.
LINE: while (<SCRIPT>) { print; next LINE if /^#/; # discard comments }
The syntax for the loop-control commands is:
last label next label redo label
If the label is omitted, the loop-control command refers to the innermost enclosing loop.
The last
command is like the break
statement in C (as used in loops); it immediately exits the loop in question. The continue
block, if any, is not executed.
The next
command is like the continue
statement in C; it skips the rest of the current iteration and starts the next iteration of the loop. If there is a continue
block on the loop, it is always executed just before the conditional is about to be evaluated again.
The redo
command restarts the loop block without evaluating the conditional again. The continue
block, if any, is not executed.
goto
Perl supports a goto
command. There are three forms: goto
label
, goto
expr
, and goto
&
name
.
The goto
label
form finds the statement labeled with label
and resumes execution there. It may not be used to go inside any construct that requires initialization, such as a subroutine or a foreach
loop.
The goto
expr
form expects the expression to return a label name.
The goto &
name
form substitutes a call to the named subroutine for the currently running subroutine.