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NAME


perlglossary - Perl Glossary

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A glossary of terms (technical and otherwise) used in the Perl documentation, derived from
the Glossary of Programming Perl, Fourth Edition. Words or phrases in bold are defined
elsewhere in this glossary.

Other useful sources include the Unicode Glossary <http://unicode.org/glossary/>, the Free
On-Line Dictionary of Computing <http://foldoc.org/>, the Jargon File
<http://catb.org/~esr/jargon/>, and Wikipedia <http://www.wikipedia.org/>.

A
accessor methods
A method used to indirectly inspect or update an objectXs state (its instance
variables).

actual arguments
The scalar values that you supply to a function or subroutine when you call it. For
instance, when you call "power("puff")", the string "puff" is the actual argument. See
also argument and formal arguments.

address operator
Some languages work directly with the memory addresses of values, but this can be like
playing with fire. Perl provides a set of asbestos gloves for handling all memory
management. The closest to an address operator in Perl is the backslash operator, but
it gives you a hard reference, which is much safer than a memory address.

algorithm
A well-defined sequence of steps, explained clearly enough that even a computer could
do them.

alias
A nickname for something, which behaves in all ways as though youXd used the original
name instead of the nickname. Temporary aliases are implicitly created in the loop
variable for "foreach" loops, in the $_ variable for "map" or "grep" operators, in $a
and $b during "sort"Xs comparison function, and in each element of @_ for the actual
arguments of a subroutine call. Permanent aliases are explicitly created in packages
by importing symbols or by assignment to typeglobs. Lexically scoped aliases for
package variables are explicitly created by the "our" declaration.

alphabetic
The sort of characters we put into words. In Unicode, this is all letters including
all ideographs and certain diacritics, letter numbers like Roman numerals, and various
combining marks.

alternatives
A list of possible choices from which you may select only one, as in, XWould you like
door A, B, or C?X Alternatives in regular expressions are separated with a single
vertical bar: "|". Alternatives in normal Perl expressions are separated with a
double vertical bar: "||". Logical alternatives in Boolean expressions are separated
with either "||" or "or".

anonymous
Used to describe a referent that is not directly accessible through a named variable.
Such a referent must be indirectly accessible through at least one hard reference.
When the last hard reference goes away, the anonymous referent is destroyed without
pity.

application
A bigger, fancier sort of program with a fancier name so people donXt realize they are
using a program.

architecture
The kind of computer youXre working on, where one Xkind of computerX means all those
computers sharing a compatible machine language. Since Perl programs are (typically)
simple text files, not executable images, a Perl program is much less sensitive to the
architecture itXs running on than programs in other languages, such as C, that are
compiled into machine code. See also platform and operating system.

argument
A piece of data supplied to a program, subroutine, function, or method to tell it what
itXs supposed to do. Also called a XparameterX.

ARGV
The name of the array containing the argument vector from the command line. If you use
the empty "<>" operator, "ARGV" is the name of both the filehandle used to traverse
the arguments and the scalar containing the name of the current input file.

arithmetical operator
A symbol such as "+" or "/" that tells Perl to do the arithmetic you were supposed to
learn in grade school.

array
An ordered sequence of values, stored such that you can easily access any of the
values using an integer subscript that specifies the valueXs offset in the sequence.

array context
An archaic expression for what is more correctly referred to as list context.

Artistic License
The open source license that Larry Wall created for Perl, maximizing PerlXs
usefulness, availability, and modifiability. The current version is 2.
(<http://www.opensource.org/licenses/artistic-license.php>).

ASCII
The American Standard Code for Information Interchange (a 7-bit character set adequate
only for poorly representing English text). Often used loosely to describe the lowest
128 values of the various ISO-8859-X character sets, a bunch of mutually incompatible
8-bit codes best described as half ASCII. See also Unicode.

assertion
A component of a regular expression that must be true for the pattern to match but
does not necessarily match any characters itself. Often used specifically to mean a
zero-width assertion.

assignment
An operator whose assigned mission in life is to change the value of a variable.

assignment operator
Either a regular assignment or a compound operator composed of an ordinary assignment
and some other operator, that changes the value of a variable in place; that is,
relative to its old value. For example, "$a += 2" adds 2 to $a.

associative array
See hash. Please. The term associative array is the old Perl 4 term for a hash. Some
languages call it a dictionary.

associativity
Determines whether you do the left operator first or the right operator first when you
have XA operator B operator CX, and the two operators are of the same precedence.
Operators like "+" are left associative, while operators like "**" are right
associative. See Camel chapter 3, XUnary and Binary OperatorsX for a list of operators
and their associativity.

asynchronous
Said of events or activities whose relative temporal ordering is indeterminate because
too many things are going on at once. Hence, an asynchronous event is one you didnXt
know when to expect.

atom
A regular expression component potentially matching a substring containing one or more
characters and treated as an indivisible syntactic unit by any following quantifier.
(Contrast with an assertion that matches something of zero width and may not be
quantified.)

atomic operation
When Democritus gave the word XatomX to the indivisible bits of matter, he meant
literally something that could not be cut: X- (not) + -XXXXX (cuttable). An atomic
operation is an action that canXt be interrupted, not one forbidden in a nuclear-free
zone.

attribute
A new feature that allows the declaration of variables and subroutines with modifiers,
as in "sub foo : locked method". Also another name for an instance variable of an
object.

autogeneration
A feature of operator overloading of objects, whereby the behavior of certain
operators can be reasonably deduced using more fundamental operators. This assumes
that the overloaded operators will often have the same relationships as the regular
operators. See Camel chapter 13, XOverloadingX.

autoincrement
To add one to something automatically, hence the name of the "++" operator. To instead
subtract one from something automatically is known as an XautodecrementX.

autoload
To load on demand. (Also called XlazyX loading.) Specifically, to call an "AUTOLOAD"
subroutine on behalf of an undefined subroutine.

autosplit
To split a string automatically, as the Xa switch does when running under Xp or Xn in
order to emulate awk. (See also the "AutoSplit" module, which has nothing to do with
the "Xa" switch but a lot to do with autoloading.)

autovivification
A Graeco-Roman word meaning Xto bring oneself to lifeX. In Perl, storage locations
(lvalues) spontaneously generate themselves as needed, including the creation of any
hard reference values to point to the next level of storage. The assignment
"$a[5][5][5][5][5] = "quintet"" potentially creates five scalar storage locations,
plus four references (in the first four scalar locations) pointing to four new
anonymous arrays (to hold the last four scalar locations). But the point of
autovivification is that you donXt have to worry about it.

AV Short for Xarray valueX, which refers to one of PerlXs internal data types that holds
an array. The "AV" type is a subclass of SV.

awk Descriptive editing termXshort for XawkwardX. Also coincidentally refers to a
venerable text-processing language from which Perl derived some of its high-level
ideas.

B
backreference
A substring captured by a subpattern within unadorned parentheses in a regex.
Backslashed decimal numbers ("\1", "\2", etc.) later in the same pattern refer back to
the corresponding subpattern in the current match. Outside the pattern, the numbered
variables ($1, $2, etc.) continue to refer to these same values, as long as the
pattern was the last successful match of the current dynamic scope.

backtracking
The practice of saying, XIf I had to do it all over, IXd do it differently,X and then
actually going back and doing it all over differently. Mathematically speaking, itXs
returning from an unsuccessful recursion on a tree of possibilities. Perl backtracks
when it attempts to match patterns with a regular expression, and its earlier attempts
donXt pan out. See the section XThe Little Engine That /Couldn(nXt)X in Camel chapter
5, XPattern MatchingX.

backward compatibility
Means you can still run your old program because we didnXt break any of the features
or bugs it was relying on.

bareword
A word sufficiently ambiguous to be deemed illegal under "use strict 'subs'". In the
absence of that stricture, a bareword is treated as if quotes were around it.

base class
A generic object type; that is, a class from which other, more specific classes are
derived genetically by inheritance. Also called a XsuperclassX by people who respect
their ancestors.

big-endian
From Swift: someone who eats eggs big end first. Also used of computers that store the
most significant byte of a word at a lower byte address than the least significant
byte. Often considered superior to little-endian machines. See also little-endian.

binary
Having to do with numbers represented in base 2. That means thereXs basically two
numbers: 0 and 1. Also used to describe a file of XnontextX, presumably because such a
file makes full use of all the binary bits in its bytes. With the advent of Unicode,
this distinction, already suspect, loses even more of its meaning.

binary operator
An operator that takes two operands.

bind
To assign a specific network address to a socket.

bit An integer in the range from 0 to 1, inclusive. The smallest possible unit of
information storage. An eighth of a byte or of a dollar. (The term XPieces of EightX
comes from being able to split the old Spanish dollar into 8 bits, each of which still
counted for money. ThatXs why a 25- cent piece today is still Xtwo bitsX.)

bit shift
The movement of bits left or right in a computer word, which has the effect of
multiplying or dividing by a power of 2.

bit string
A sequence of bits that is actually being thought of as a sequence of bits, for once.

bless
In corporate life, to grant official approval to a thing, as in, XThe VP of
Engineering has blessed our WebCruncher project.X Similarly, in Perl, to grant
official approval to a referent so that it can function as an object, such as a
WebCruncher object. See the "bless" function in Camel chapter 27, XFunctionsX.

block
What a process does when it has to wait for something: XMy process blocked waiting for
the disk.X As an unrelated noun, it refers to a large chunk of data, of a size that
the operating system likes to deal with (normally a power of 2 such as 512 or 8192).
Typically refers to a chunk of data thatXs coming from or going to a disk file.

BLOCK
A syntactic construct consisting of a sequence of Perl statements that is delimited by
braces. The "if" and "while" statements are defined in terms of "BLOCK"s, for
instance. Sometimes we also say XblockX to mean a lexical scope; that is, a sequence
of statements that acts like a "BLOCK", such as within an "eval" or a file, even
though the statements arenXt delimited by braces.

block buffering
A method of making input and output efficient by passing one block at a time. By
default, Perl does block buffering to disk files. See buffer and command buffering.

Boolean
A value that is either true or false.

Boolean context
A special kind of scalar context used in conditionals to decide whether the scalar
value returned by an expression is true or false. Does not evaluate as either a string
or a number. See context.

breakpoint
A spot in your program where youXve told the debugger to stop execution so you can
poke around and see whether anything is wrong yet.

broadcast
To send a datagram to multiple destinations simultaneously.

BSD A psychoactive drug, popular in the X80s, probably developed at UC Berkeley or
thereabouts. Similar in many ways to the prescription-only medication called XSystem
VX, but infinitely more useful. (Or, at least, more fun.) The full chemical name is
XBerkeley Standard DistributionX.

bucket
A location in a hash table containing (potentially) multiple entries whose keys XhashX
to the same hash value according to its hash function. (As internal policy, you donXt
have to worry about it unless youXre into internals, or policy.)

buffer
A temporary holding location for data. Data that are Block buffering means that the
data is passed on to its destination whenever the buffer is full. Line buffering means
that itXs passed on whenever a complete line is received. Command buffering means that
itXs passed every time you do a "print" command (or equivalent). If your output is
unbuffered, the system processes it one byte at a time without the use of a holding
area. This can be rather inefficient.

built-in
A function that is predefined in the language. Even when hidden by overriding, you can
always get at a built- in function by qualifying its name with the "CORE::"
pseudopackage.

bundle
A group of related modules on CPAN. (Also sometimes refers to a group of command-line
switches grouped into one switch cluster.)

byte
A piece of data worth eight bits in most places.

bytecode
A pidgin-like lingo spoken among Xdroids when they donXt wish to reveal their
orientation (see endian). Named after some similar languages spoken (for similar
reasons) between compilers and interpreters in the late 20XX century. These languages
are characterized by representing everything as a nonarchitecture-dependent sequence
of bytes.

C
C A language beloved by many for its inside-out type definitions, inscrutable precedence
rules, and heavy overloading of the function-call mechanism. (Well, actually, people
first switched to C because they found lowercase identifiers easier to read than
upper.) Perl is written in C, so itXs not surprising that Perl borrowed a few ideas
from it.

cache
A data repository. Instead of computing expensive answers several times, compute it
once and save the result.

callback
A handler that you register with some other part of your program in the hope that the
other part of your program will trigger your handler when some event of interest
transpires.

call by reference
An argument-passing mechanism in which the formal arguments refer directly to the
actual arguments, and the subroutine can change the actual arguments by changing the
formal arguments. That is, the formal argument is an alias for the actual argument.
See also call by value.

call by value
An argument-passing mechanism in which the formal arguments refer to a copy of the
actual arguments, and the subroutine cannot change the actual arguments by changing
the formal arguments. See also call by reference.

canonical
Reduced to a standard form to facilitate comparison.

capture variables
The variablesXsuch as $1 and $2, and "%+" and %X Xthat hold the text remembered in a
pattern match. See Camel chapter 5, XPattern MatchingX.

capturing
The use of parentheses around a subpattern in a regular expression to store the
matched substring as a backreference. (Captured strings are also returned as a list in
list context.) See Camel chapter 5, XPattern MatchingX.

cargo cult
Copying and pasting code without understanding it, while superstitiously believing in
its value. This term originated from preindustrial cultures dealing with the detritus
of explorers and colonizers of technologically advanced cultures. See The Gods Must Be
Crazy.

case
A property of certain characters. Originally, typesetter stored capital letters in the
upper of two cases and small letters in the lower one. Unicode recognizes three cases:
lowercase (character property "\p{lower}"), titlecase ("\p{title}"), and uppercase
("\p{upper}"). A fourth casemapping called foldcase is not itself a distinct case, but
it is used internally to implement casefolding. Not all letters have case, and some
nonletters have case.

casefolding
Comparing or matching a string case-insensitively. In Perl, it is implemented with the
"/i" pattern modifier, the "fc" function, and the "\F" double-quote translation
escape.

casemapping
The process of converting a string to one of the four Unicode casemaps; in Perl, it is
implemented with the "fc", "lc", "ucfirst", and "uc" functions.

character
The smallest individual element of a string. Computers store characters as integers,
but Perl lets you operate on them as text. The integer used to represent a particular
character is called that characterXs codepoint.

character class
A square-bracketed list of characters used in a regular expression to indicate that
any character of the set may occur at a given point. Loosely, any predefined set of
characters so used.

character property
A predefined character class matchable by the "\p" or "\P" metasymbol. Unicode defines
hundreds of standard properties for every possible codepoint, and Perl defines a few
of its own, too.

circumfix operator
An operator that surrounds its operand, like the angle operator, or parentheses, or a
hug.

class
A user-defined type, implemented in Perl via a package that provides (either directly
or by inheritance) methods (that is, subroutines) to handle instances of the class
(its objects). See also inheritance.

class method
A method whose invocant is a package name, not an object reference. A method
associated with the class as a whole. Also see instance method.

client
In networking, a process that initiates contact with a server process in order to
exchange data and perhaps receive a service.

closure
An anonymous subroutine that, when a reference to it is generated at runtime, keeps
track of the identities of externally visible lexical variables, even after those
lexical variables have supposedly gone out of scope. TheyXre called XclosuresX because
this sort of behavior gives mathematicians a sense of closure.

cluster
A parenthesized subpattern used to group parts of a regular expression into a single
atom.

CODE
The word returned by the "ref" function when you apply it to a reference to a
subroutine. See also CV.

code generator
A system that writes code for you in a low-level language, such as code to implement
the backend of a compiler. See program generator.

codepoint
The integer a computer uses to represent a given character. ASCII codepoints are in
the range 0 to 127; Unicode codepoints are in the range 0 to 0x1F_FFFF; and Perl
codepoints are in the range 0 to 2XXX1 or 0 to 2XXX1, depending on your native integer
size. In Perl Culture, sometimes called ordinals.

code subpattern
A regular expression subpattern whose real purpose is to execute some Perl codeXfor
example, the "(?{...})" and "(??{...})" subpatterns.

collating sequence
The order into which characters sort. This is used by string comparison routines to
decide, for example, where in this glossary to put Xcollating sequenceX.

co-maintainer
A person with permissions to index a namespace in PAUSE. Anyone can upload any
namespace, but only primary and co-maintainers get their contributions indexed.

combining character
Any character with the General Category of Combining Mark ("\p{GC=M}"), which may be
spacing or nonspacing. Some are even invisible. A sequence of combining characters
following a grapheme base character together make up a single user-visible character
called a grapheme. Most but not all diacritics are combining characters, and vice
versa.

command
In shell programming, the syntactic combination of a program name and its arguments.
More loosely, anything you type to a shell (a command interpreter) that starts it
doing something. Even more loosely, a Perl statement, which might start with a label
and typically ends with a semicolon.

command buffering
A mechanism in Perl that lets you store up the output of each Perl command and then
flush it out as a single request to the operating system. ItXs enabled by setting the
$| ($AUTOFLUSH) variable to a true value. ItXs used when you donXt want data sitting
around, not going where itXs supposed to, which may happen because the default on a
file or pipe is to use block buffering.

command-line arguments
The values you supply along with a program name when you tell a shell to execute a
command. These values are passed to a Perl program through @ARGV.

command name
The name of the program currently executing, as typed on the command line. In C, the
command name is passed to the program as the first command-line argument. In Perl, it
comes in separately as $0.

comment
A remark that doesnXt affect the meaning of the program. In Perl, a comment is
introduced by a "#" character and continues to the end of the line.

compilation unit
The file (or string, in the case of "eval") that is currently being compiled.

compile
The process of turning source code into a machine-usable form. See compile phase.

compile phase
Any time before Perl starts running your main program. See also run phase. Compile
phase is mostly spent in compile time, but may also be spent in runtime when "BEGIN"
blocks, "use" or "no" declarations, or constant subexpressions are being evaluated.
The startup and import code of any "use" declaration is also run during compile phase.

compiler
Strictly speaking, a program that munches up another program and spits out yet another
file containing the program in a Xmore executableX form, typically containing native
machine instructions. The perl program is not a compiler by this definition, but it
does contain a kind of compiler that takes a program and turns it into a more
executable form (syntax trees) within the perl process itself, which the interpreter
then interprets. There are, however, extension modules to get Perl to act more like a
XrealX compiler. See Camel chapter 16, XCompilingX.

compile time
The time when Perl is trying to make sense of your code, as opposed to when it thinks
it knows what your code means and is merely trying to do what it thinks your code says
to do, which is runtime.

composer
A XconstructorX for a referent that isnXt really an object, like an anonymous array or
a hash (or a sonata, for that matter). For example, a pair of braces acts as a
composer for a hash, and a pair of brackets acts as a composer for an array. See the
section XCreating ReferencesX in Camel chapter 8, XReferencesX.

concatenation
The process of gluing one catXs nose to another catXs tail. Also a similar operation
on two strings.

conditional
Something XiffyX. See Boolean context.

connection
In telephony, the temporary electrical circuit between the callerXs and the calleeXs
phone. In networking, the same kind of temporary circuit between a client and a
server.

construct
As a noun, a piece of syntax made up of smaller pieces. As a transitive verb, to
create an object using a constructor.

constructor
Any class method, instance, or subroutine that composes, initializes, blesses, and
returns an object. Sometimes we use the term loosely to mean a composer.

context
The surroundings or environment. The context given by the surrounding code determines
what kind of data a particular expression is expected to return. The three primary
contexts are list context, scalar, and void context. Scalar context is sometimes
subdivided into Boolean context, numeric context, string context, and void context.
ThereXs also a XdonXt careX context (which is dealt with in Camel chapter 2, XBits and
PiecesX, if you care).

continuation
The treatment of more than one physical line as a single logical line. Makefile lines
are continued by putting a backslash before the newline. Mail headers, as defined by
RFC 822, are continued by putting a space or tab after the newline. In general, lines
in Perl do not need any form of continuation mark, because whitespace (including
newlines) is gleefully ignored. Usually.

core dump
The corpse of a process, in the form of a file left in the working directory of the
process, usually as a result of certain kinds of fatal errors.

CPAN
The Comprehensive Perl Archive Network. (See the Camel Preface and Camel chapter 19,
XCPANX for details.)

C preprocessor
The typical C compilerXs first pass, which processes lines beginning with "#" for
conditional compilation and macro definition, and does various manipulations of the
program text based on the current definitions. Also known as cpp(1).

cracker
Someone who breaks security on computer systems. A cracker may be a true hacker or
only a script kiddie.

currently selected output channel
The last filehandle that was designated with "select(FILEHANDLE)"; "STDOUT", if no
filehandle has been selected.

current package
The package in which the current statement is compiled. Scan backward in the text of
your program through the current lexical scope or any enclosing lexical scopes until
you find a package declaration. ThatXs your current package name.

current working directory
See working directory.

CV In academia, a curriculum vitae, a fancy kind of resume. In Perl, an internal Xcode
valueX typedef holding a subroutine. The "CV" type is a subclass of SV.

D
dangling statement
A bare, single statement, without any braces, hanging off an "if" or "while"
conditional. C allows them. Perl doesnXt.

datagram
A packet of data, such as a UDP message, that (from the viewpoint of the programs
involved) can be sent independently over the network. (In fact, all packets are sent
independently at the IP level, but stream protocols such as TCP hide this from your
program.)

data structure
How your various pieces of data relate to each other and what shape they make when you
put them all together, as in a rectangular table or a triangular tree.

data type
A set of possible values, together with all the operations that know how to deal with
those values. For example, a numeric data type has a certain set of numbers that you
can work with, as well as various mathematical operations that you can do on the
numbers, but would make little sense on, say, a string such as "Kilroy". Strings have
their own operations, such as concatenation. Compound types made of a number of
smaller pieces generally have operations to compose and decompose them, and perhaps to
rearrange them. Objects that model things in the real world often have operations that
correspond to real activities. For instance, if you model an elevator, your elevator
object might have an "open_door" method.

DBM Stands for XDatabase ManagementX routines, a set of routines that emulate an
associative array using disk files. The routines use a dynamic hashing scheme to
locate any entry with only two disk accesses. DBM files allow a Perl program to keep a
persistent hash across multiple invocations. You can "tie" your hash variables to
various DBM implementations.

declaration
An assertion that states something exists and perhaps describes what itXs like,
without giving any commitment as to how or where youXll use it. A declaration is like
the part of your recipe that says, Xtwo cups flour, one large egg, four or five
tadpolesXX See statement for its opposite. Note that some declarations also function
as statements. Subroutine declarations also act as definitions if a body is supplied.

declarator
Something that tells your program what sort of variable youXd like. Perl doesnXt
require you to declare variables, but you can use "my", "our", or "state" to denote
that you want something other than the default.

decrement
To subtract a value from a variable, as in Xdecrement $xX (meaning to remove 1 from
its value) or Xdecrement $x by 3X.

default
A value chosen for you if you donXt supply a value of your own.

defined
Having a meaning. Perl thinks that some of the things people try to do are devoid of
meaning; in particular, making use of variables that have never been given a value and
performing certain operations on data that isnXt there. For example, if you try to
read data past the end of a file, Perl will hand you back an undefined value. See also
false and the "defined" entry in Camel chapter 27, XFunctionsX.

delimiter
A character or string that sets bounds to an arbitrarily sized textual object, not to
be confused with a separator or terminator. XTo delimitX really just means Xto
surroundX or Xto encloseX (like these parentheses are doing).

dereference
A fancy computer science term meaning Xto follow a reference to what it points toX.
The XdeX part of it refers to the fact that youXre taking away one level of
indirection.

derived class
A class that defines some of its methods in terms of a more generic class, called a
base class. Note that classes arenXt classified exclusively into base classes or
derived classes: a class can function as both a derived class and a base class
simultaneously, which is kind of classy.

descriptor
See file descriptor.

destroy
To deallocate the memory of a referent (first triggering its "DESTROY" method, if it
has one).

destructor
A special method that is called when an object is thinking about destroying itself. A
Perl programXs "DESTROY" method doesnXt do the actual destruction; Perl just triggers
the method in case the class wants to do any associated cleanup.

device
A whiz-bang hardware gizmo (like a disk or tape drive or a modem or a joystick or a
mouse) attached to your computer, which the operating system tries to make look like a
file (or a bunch of files). Under Unix, these fake files tend to live in the /dev
directory.

directive
A pod directive. See Camel chapter 23, XPlain Old DocumentationX.

directory
A special file that contains other files. Some operating systems call these XfoldersX,
XdrawersX, XcataloguesX, or XcatalogsX.

directory handle
A name that represents a particular instance of opening a directory to read it, until
you close it. See the "opendir" function.

discipline
Some people need this and some people avoid it. For Perl, itXs an old way to say I/O
layer.

dispatch
To send something to its correct destination. Often used metaphorically to indicate a
transfer of programmatic control to a destination selected algorithmically, often by
lookup in a table of function references or, in the case of object methods, by
traversing the inheritance tree looking for the most specific definition for the
method.

distribution
A standard, bundled release of a system of software. The default usage implies source
code is included. If that is not the case, it will be called a Xbinary-onlyX
distribution.

dual-lived
Some modules live both in the Standard Library and on CPAN. These modules might be
developed on two tracks as people modify either version. The trend currently is to
untangle these situations.

dweomer
An enchantment, illusion, phantasm, or jugglery. Said when PerlXs magical dwimmer
effects donXt do what you expect, but rather seem to be the product of arcane
dweomercraft, sorcery, or wonder working. [From Middle English.]

dwimmer
DWIM is an acronym for XDo What I MeanX, the principle that something should just do
what you want it to do without an undue amount of fuss. A bit of code that does
XdwimmingX is a XdwimmerX. Dwimming can require a great deal of behind-the-scenes
magic, which (if it doesnXt stay properly behind the scenes) is called a dweomer
instead.

dynamic scoping
Dynamic scoping works over a dynamic scope, making variables visible throughout the
rest of the block in which they are first used and in any subroutines that are called
by the rest of the block. Dynamically scoped variables can have their values
temporarily changed (and implicitly restored later) by a "local" operator. (Compare
lexical scoping.) Used more loosely to mean how a subroutine that is in the middle of
calling another subroutine XcontainsX that subroutine at runtime.

E
eclectic
Derived from many sources. Some would say too many.

element
A basic building block. When youXre talking about an array, itXs one of the items that
make up the array.

embedding
When something is contained in something else, particularly when that might be
considered surprising: XIXve embedded a complete Perl interpreter in my editor!X

empty subclass test
The notion that an empty derived class should behave exactly like its base class.

encapsulation
The veil of abstraction separating the interface from the implementation (whether
enforced or not), which mandates that all access to an objectXs state be through
methods alone.

endian
See little-endian and big-endian.

en passant
When you change a value as it is being copied. [From French Xin passingX, as in the
exotic pawn-capturing maneuver in chess.]

environment
The collective set of environment variables your process inherits from its parent.
Accessed via %ENV.

environment variable
A mechanism by which some high-level agent such as a user can pass its preferences
down to its future offspring (child processes, grandchild processes, great-grandchild
processes, and so on). Each environment variable is a key/value pair, like one entry
in a hash.

EOF End of File. Sometimes used metaphorically as the terminating string of a here
document.

errno
The error number returned by a syscall when it fails. Perl refers to the error by the
name $! (or $OS_ERROR if you use the English module).

error
See exception or fatal error.

escape sequence
See metasymbol.

exception
A fancy term for an error. See fatal error.

exception handling
The way a program responds to an error. The exception-handling mechanism in Perl is
the "eval" operator.

exec
To throw away the current processXs program and replace it with another, without
exiting the process or relinquishing any resources held (apart from the old memory
image).

executable file
A file that is specially marked to tell the operating system that itXs okay to run
this file as a program. Usually shortened to XexecutableX.

execute
To run a program or subroutine. (Has nothing to do with the "kill" built-in, unless
youXre trying to run a signal handler.)

execute bit
The special mark that tells the operating system it can run this program. There are
actually three execute bits under Unix, and which bit gets used depends on whether you
own the file singularly, collectively, or not at all.

exit status
See status.

exploit
Used as a noun in this case, this refers to a known way to compromise a program to get
it to do something the author didnXt intend. Your task is to write unexploitable
programs.

export
To make symbols from a module available for import by other modules.

expression
Anything you can legally say in a spot where a value is required. Typically composed
of literals, variables, operators, functions, and subroutine calls, not necessarily in
that order.

extension
A Perl module that also pulls in compiled C or C++ code. More generally, any
experimental option that can be compiled into Perl, such as multithreading.

F
false
In Perl, any value that would look like "" or "0" if evaluated in a string context.
Since undefined values evaluate to "", all undefined values are false, but not all
false values are undefined.

FAQ Frequently Asked Question (although not necessarily frequently answered, especially if
the answer appears in the Perl FAQ shipped standard with Perl).

fatal error
An uncaught exception, which causes termination of the process after printing a
message on your standard error stream. Errors that happen inside an "eval" are not
fatal. Instead, the "eval" terminates after placing the exception message in the $@
($EVAL_ERROR) variable. You can try to provoke a fatal error with the "die" operator
(known as throwing or raising an exception), but this may be caught by a dynamically
enclosing "eval". If not caught, the "die" becomes a fatal error.

feeping creaturism
A spoonerism of Xcreeping featurismX, noting the biological urge to add just one more
feature to a program.

field
A single piece of numeric or string data that is part of a longer string, record, or
line. Variable-width fields are usually split up by separators (so use "split" to
extract the fields), while fixed-width fields are usually at fixed positions (so use
"unpack"). Instance variables are also known as XfieldsX.

FIFO
First In, First Out. See also LIFO. Also a nickname for a named pipe.

file
A named collection of data, usually stored on disk in a directory in a filesystem.
Roughly like a document, if youXre into office metaphors. In modern filesystems, you
can actually give a file more than one name. Some files have special properties, like
directories and devices.

file descriptor
The little number the operating system uses to keep track of which opened file youXre
talking about. Perl hides the file descriptor inside a standard I/O stream and then
attaches the stream to a filehandle.

fileglob
A XwildcardX match on filenames. See the "glob" function.

filehandle
An identifier (not necessarily related to the real name of a file) that represents a
particular instance of opening a file, until you close it. If youXre going to open and
close several different files in succession, itXs fine to open each of them with the
same filehandle, so you donXt have to write out separate code to process each file.

filename
One name for a file. This name is listed in a directory. You can use it in an "open"
to tell the operating system exactly which file you want to open, and associate the
file with a filehandle, which will carry the subsequent identity of that file in your
program, until you close it.

filesystem
A set of directories and files residing on a partition of the disk. Sometimes known as
a XpartitionX. You can change the fileXs name or even move a file around from
directory to directory within a filesystem without actually moving the file itself, at
least under Unix.

file test operator
A built-in unary operator that you use to determine whether something is true about a
file, such as "Xo $filename" to test whether youXre the owner of the file.

filter
A program designed to take a stream of input and transform it into a stream of output.

first-come
The first PAUSE author to upload a namespace automatically becomes the primary
maintainer for that namespace. The Xfirst comeX permissions distinguish a primary
maintainer who was assigned that role from one who received it automatically.

flag
We tend to avoid this term because it means so many things. It may mean a command-
line switch that takes no argument itself (such as PerlXs "Xn" and "Xp" flags) or,
less frequently, a single-bit indicator (such as the "O_CREAT" and "O_EXCL" flags used
in "sysopen"). Sometimes informally used to refer to certain regex modifiers.

floating point
A method of storing numbers in Xscientific notationX, such that the precision of the
number is independent of its magnitude (the decimal point XfloatsX). Perl does its
numeric work with floating-point numbers (sometimes called XfloatsX) when it canXt get
away with using integers. Floating-point numbers are mere approximations of real
numbers.

flush
The act of emptying a buffer, often before itXs full.

FMTEYEWTK
Far More Than Everything You Ever Wanted To Know. An exhaustive treatise on one narrow
topic, something of a super-FAQ. See Tom for far more.

foldcase
The casemap used in Unicode when comparing or matching without regard to case.
Comparing lower-, title-, or uppercase are all unreliable due to UnicodeXs complex,
one-to-many case mappings. Foldcase is a lowercase variant (using a partially
decomposed normalization form for certain codepoints) created specifically to resolve
this.

fork
To create a child process identical to the parent process at its moment of conception,
at least until it gets ideas of its own. A thread with protected memory.

formal arguments
The generic names by which a subroutine knows its arguments. In many languages, formal
arguments are always given individual names; in Perl, the formal arguments are just
the elements of an array. The formal arguments to a Perl program are $ARGV[0],
$ARGV[1], and so on. Similarly, the formal arguments to a Perl subroutine are $_[0],
$_[1], and so on. You may give the arguments individual names by assigning the values
to a "my" list. See also actual arguments.

format
A specification of how many spaces and digits and things to put somewhere so that
whatever youXre printing comes out nice and pretty.

freely available
Means you donXt have to pay money to get it, but the copyright on it may still belong
to someone else (like Larry).

freely redistributable
Means youXre not in legal trouble if you give a bootleg copy of it to your friends and
we find out about it. In fact, weXd rather you gave a copy to all your friends.

freeware
Historically, any software that you give away, particularly if you make the source
code available as well. Now often called open source software. Recently there has been
a trend to use the term in contradistinction to open source software, to refer only to
free software released under the Free Software FoundationXs GPL (General Public
License), but this is difficult to justify etymologically.

function
Mathematically, a mapping of each of a set of input values to a particular output
value. In computers, refers to a subroutine or operator that returns a value. It may
or may not have input values (called arguments).

funny character
Someone like Larry, or one of his peculiar friends. Also refers to the strange
prefixes that Perl requires as noun markers on its variables.

G
garbage collection
A misnamed featureXit should be called, Xexpecting your mother to pick up after youX.
Strictly speaking, Perl doesnXt do this, but it relies on a reference-counting
mechanism to keep things tidy. However, we rarely speak strictly and will often refer
to the reference-counting scheme as a form of garbage collection. (If itXs any
comfort, when your interpreter exits, a XrealX garbage collector runs to make sure
everything is cleaned up if youXve been messy with circular references and such.)

GID Group IDXin Unix, the numeric group ID that the operating system uses to identify you
and members of your group.

glob
Strictly, the shellXs "*" character, which will match a XglobX of characters when
youXre trying to generate a list of filenames. Loosely, the act of using globs and
similar symbols to do pattern matching. See also fileglob and typeglob.

global
Something you can see from anywhere, usually used of variables and subroutines that
are visible everywhere in your program. In Perl, only certain special variables are
truly globalXmost variables (and all subroutines) exist only in the current package.
Global variables can be declared with "our". See XGlobal DeclarationsX in Camel
chapter 4, XStatements and DeclarationsX.

global destruction
The garbage collection of globals (and the running of any associated object
destructors) that takes place when a Perl interpreter is being shut down. Global
destruction should not be confused with the Apocalypse, except perhaps when it should.

glue language
A language such as Perl that is good at hooking things together that werenXt intended
to be hooked together.

granularity
The size of the pieces youXre dealing with, mentally speaking.

grapheme
A graphene is an allotrope of carbon arranged in a hexagonal crystal lattice one atom
thick. A grapheme, or more fully, a grapheme cluster string is a single user-visible
character, which may in turn be several characters (codepoints) long. For example, a
carriage return plus a line feed is a single grapheme but two characters, while a XXX
is a single grapheme but one, two, or even three characters, depending on
normalization.

greedy
A subpattern whose quantifier wants to match as many things as possible.

grep
Originally from the old Unix editor command for XGlobally search for a Regular
Expression and Print itX, now used in the general sense of any kind of search,
especially text searches. Perl has a built-in "grep" function that searches a list for
elements matching any given criterion, whereas the grep(1) program searches for lines
matching a regular expression in one or more files.

group
A set of users of which you are a member. In some operating systems (like Unix), you
can give certain file access permissions to other members of your group.

GV An internal Xglob valueX typedef, holding a typeglob. The "GV" type is a subclass of
SV.

H
hacker
Someone who is brilliantly persistent in solving technical problems, whether these
involve golfing, fighting orcs, or programming. Hacker is a neutral term, morally
speaking. Good hackers are not to be confused with evil crackers or clueless script
kiddies. If you confuse them, we will presume that you are either evil or clueless.

handler
A subroutine or method that Perl calls when your program needs to respond to some
internal event, such as a signal, or an encounter with an operator subject to operator
overloading. See also callback.

hard reference
A scalar value containing the actual address of a referent, such that the referentXs
reference count accounts for it. (Some hard references are held internally, such as
the implicit reference from one of a typeglobXs variable slots to its corresponding
referent.) A hard reference is different from a symbolic reference.

hash
An unordered association of key/value pairs, stored such that you can easily use a
string key to look up its associated data value. This glossary is like a hash, where
the word to be defined is the key and the definition is the value. A hash is also
sometimes septisyllabically called an Xassociative arrayX, which is a pretty good
reason for simply calling it a XhashX instead.

hash table
A data structure used internally by Perl for implementing associative arrays (hashes)
efficiently. See also bucket.

header file
A file containing certain required definitions that you must include XaheadX of the
rest of your program to do certain obscure operations. A C header file has a .h
extension. Perl doesnXt really have header files, though historically Perl has
sometimes used translated .h files with a .ph extension. See "require" in Camel
chapter 27, XFunctionsX. (Header files have been superseded by the module mechanism.)

here document
So called because of a similar construct in shells that pretends that the lines
following the command are a separate file to be fed to the command, up to some
terminating string. In Perl, however, itXs just a fancy form of quoting.

hexadecimal
A number in base 16, XhexX for short. The digits for 10 through 15 are customarily
represented by the letters "a" through "f". Hexadecimal constants in Perl start with
"0x". See also the "hex" function in Camel chapter 27, XFunctionsX.

home directory
The directory you are put into when you log in. On a Unix system, the name is often
placed into $ENV{HOME} or $ENV{LOGDIR} by login, but you can also find it with
"(get""pwuid($<))[7]". (Some platforms do not have a concept of a home directory.)

host
The computer on which a program or other data resides.

hubris
Excessive pride, the sort of thing for which Zeus zaps you. Also the quality that
makes you write (and maintain) programs that other people wonXt want to say bad things
about. Hence, the third great virtue of a programmer. See also laziness and
impatience.

HV Short for a Xhash valueX typedef, which holds PerlXs internal representation of a
hash. The "HV" type is a subclass of SV.

I
identifier
A legally formed name for most anything in which a computer program might be
interested. Many languages (including Perl) allow identifiers to start with an
alphabetic character, and then contain alphabetics and digits. Perl also allows
connector punctuation like the underscore character wherever it allows alphabetics.
(Perl also has more complicated names, like qualified names.)

impatience
The anger you feel when the computer is being lazy. This makes you write programs
that donXt just react to your needs, but actually anticipate them. Or at least that
pretend to. Hence, the second great virtue of a programmer. See also laziness and
hubris.

implementation
How a piece of code actually goes about doing its job. Users of the code should not
count on implementation details staying the same unless they are part of the published
interface.

import
To gain access to symbols that are exported from another module. See "use" in Camel
chapter 27, XFunctionsX.

increment
To increase the value of something by 1 (or by some other number, if so specified).

indexing
In olden days, the act of looking up a key in an actual index (such as a phone book).
But now it's merely the act of using any kind of key or position to find the
corresponding value, even if no index is involved. Things have degenerated to the
point that PerlXs "index" function merely locates the position (index) of one string
in another.

indirect filehandle
An expression that evaluates to something that can be used as a filehandle: a string
(filehandle name), a typeglob, a typeglob reference, or a low-level IO object.

indirection
If something in a program isnXt the value youXre looking for but indicates where the
value is, thatXs indirection. This can be done with either symbolic references or
hard.

indirect object
In English grammar, a short noun phrase between a verb and its direct object
indicating the beneficiary or recipient of the action. In Perl, "print STDOUT
"$foo\n";" can be understood as Xverb indirect-object objectX, where "STDOUT" is the
recipient of the "print" action, and "$foo" is the object being printed. Similarly,
when invoking a method, you might place the invocant in the dative slot between the
method and its arguments:

$gollum = new Pathetic::Creature "Smeagol";
give $gollum "Fisssssh!";
give $gollum "Precious!";

indirect object slot
The syntactic position falling between a method call and its arguments when using the
indirect object invocation syntax. (The slot is distinguished by the absence of a
comma between it and the next argument.) "STDERR" is in the indirect object slot here:

print STDERR "Awake! Awake! Fear, Fire, Foes! Awake!\n";

infix
An operator that comes in between its operands, such as multiplication in "24 * 7".

inheritance
What you get from your ancestors, genetically or otherwise. If you happen to be a
class, your ancestors are called base classes and your descendants are called derived
classes. See single inheritance and multiple inheritance.

instance
Short for Xan instance of a classX, meaning an object of that class.

instance data
See instance variable.

instance method
A method of an object, as opposed to a class method.

A method whose invocant is an object, not a package name. Every object of a class
shares all the methods of that class, so an instance method applies to all instances
of the class, rather than applying to a particular instance. Also see class method.

instance variable
An attribute of an object; data stored with the particular object rather than with the
class as a whole.

integer
A number with no fractional (decimal) part. A counting number, like 1, 2, 3, and so
on, but including 0 and the negatives.

interface
The services a piece of code promises to provide forever, in contrast to its
implementation, which it should feel free to change whenever it likes.

interpolation
The insertion of a scalar or list value somewhere in the middle of another value, such
that it appears to have been there all along. In Perl, variable interpolation happens
in double-quoted strings and patterns, and list interpolation occurs when constructing
the list of values to pass to a list operator or other such construct that takes a
"LIST".

interpreter
Strictly speaking, a program that reads a second program and does what the second
program says directly without turning the program into a different form first, which
is what compilers do. Perl is not an interpreter by this definition, because it
contains a kind of compiler that takes a program and turns it into a more executable
form (syntax trees) within the perl process itself, which the Perl runtime system then
interprets.

invocant
The agent on whose behalf a method is invoked. In a class method, the invocant is a
package name. In an instance method, the invocant is an object reference.

invocation
The act of calling up a deity, daemon, program, method, subroutine, or function to get
it to do what you think itXs supposed to do. We usually XcallX subroutines but
XinvokeX methods, since it sounds cooler.

I/O Input from, or output to, a file or device.

IO An internal I/O object. Can also mean indirect object.

I/O layer
One of the filters between the data and what you get as input or what you end up with
as output.

IPA India Pale Ale. Also the International Phonetic Alphabet, the standard alphabet used
for phonetic notation worldwide. Draws heavily on Unicode, including many combining
characters.

IP Internet Protocol, or Intellectual Property.

IPC Interprocess Communication.

is-a
A relationship between two objects in which one object is considered to be a more
specific version of the other, generic object: XA camel is a mammal.X Since the
generic object really only exists in a Platonic sense, we usually add a little
abstraction to the notion of objects and think of the relationship as being between a
generic base class and a specific derived class. Oddly enough, Platonic classes donXt
always have Platonic relationshipsXsee inheritance.

iteration
Doing something repeatedly.

iterator
A special programming gizmo that keeps track of where you are in something that youXre
trying to iterate over. The "foreach" loop in Perl contains an iterator; so does a
hash, allowing you to "each" through it.

IV The integer four, not to be confused with six, TomXs favorite editor. IV also means an
internal Integer Value of the type a scalar can hold, not to be confused with an NV.

J
JAPH
XJust Another Perl HackerX, a clever but cryptic bit of Perl code that, when executed,
evaluates to that string. Often used to illustrate a particular Perl feature, and
something of an ongoing Obfuscated Perl Contest seen in USENET signatures.

K
key The string index to a hash, used to look up the value associated with that key.

keyword
See reserved words.

L
label
A name you give to a statement so that you can talk about that statement elsewhere in
the program.

laziness
The quality that makes you go to great effort to reduce overall energy expenditure. It
makes you write labor-saving programs that other people will find useful, and then
document what you wrote so you donXt have to answer so many questions about it. Hence,
the first great virtue of a programmer. Also hence, this book. See also impatience and
hubris.

leftmost longest
The preference of the regular expression engine to match the leftmost occurrence of a
pattern, then given a position at which a match will occur, the preference for the
longest match (presuming the use of a greedy quantifier). See Camel chapter 5,
XPattern MatchingX for much more on this subject.

left shift
A bit shift that multiplies the number by some power of 2.

lexeme
Fancy term for a token.

lexer
Fancy term for a tokener.

lexical analysis
Fancy term for tokenizing.

lexical scoping
Looking at your Oxford English Dictionary through a microscope. (Also known as static
scoping, because dictionaries donXt change very fast.) Similarly, looking at variables
stored in a private dictionary (namespace) for each scope, which are visible only from
their point of declaration down to the end of the lexical scope in which they are
declared. XSyn. static scoping. XAnt. dynamic scoping.

lexical variable
A variable subject to lexical scoping, declared by "my". Often just called a
XlexicalX. (The "our" declaration declares a lexically scoped name for a global
variable, which is not itself a lexical variable.)

library
Generally, a collection of procedures. In ancient days, referred to a collection of
subroutines in a .pl file. In modern times, refers more often to the entire collection
of Perl modules on your system.

LIFO
Last In, First Out. See also FIFO. A LIFO is usually called a stack.

line
In Unix, a sequence of zero or more nonnewline characters terminated with a newline
character. On non-Unix machines, this is emulated by the C library even if the
underlying operating system has different ideas.

linebreak
A grapheme consisting of either a carriage return followed by a line feed or any
character with the Unicode Vertical Space character property.

line buffering
Used by a standard I/O output stream that flushes its buffer after every newline. Many
standard I/O libraries automatically set up line buffering on output that is going to
the terminal.

line number
The number of lines read previous to this one, plus 1. Perl keeps a separate line
number for each source or input file it opens. The current source fileXs line number
is represented by "__LINE__". The current input line number (for the file that was
most recently read via "<FH>") is represented by the $. ($INPUT_LINE_NUMBER) variable.
Many error messages report both values, if available.

link
Used as a noun, a name in a directory that represents a file. A given file can have
multiple links to it. ItXs like having the same phone number listed in the phone
directory under different names. As a verb, to resolve a partially compiled fileXs
unresolved symbols into a (nearly) executable image. Linking can generally be static
or dynamic, which has nothing to do with static or dynamic scoping.

LIST
A syntactic construct representing a comma- separated list of expressions, evaluated
to produce a list value. Each expression in a "LIST" is evaluated in list context and
interpolated into the list value.

list
An ordered set of scalar values.

list context
The situation in which an expression is expected by its surroundings (the code calling
it) to return a list of values rather than a single value. Functions that want a
"LIST" of arguments tell those arguments that they should produce a list value. See
also context.

list operator
An operator that does something with a list of values, such as "join" or "grep".
Usually used for named built-in operators (such as "print", "unlink", and "system")
that do not require parentheses around their argument list.

list value
An unnamed list of temporary scalar values that may be passed around within a program
from any list-generating function to any function or construct that provides a list
context.

literal
A token in a programming language, such as a number or string, that gives you an
actual value instead of merely representing possible values as a variable does.

little-endian
From Swift: someone who eats eggs little end first. Also used of computers that store
the least significant byte of a word at a lower byte address than the most significant
byte. Often considered superior to big-endian machines. See also big-endian.

local
Not meaning the same thing everywhere. A global variable in Perl can be localized
inside a dynamic scope via the "local" operator.

logical operator
Symbols representing the concepts XandX, XorX, XxorX, and XnotX.

lookahead
An assertion that peeks at the string to the right of the current match location.

lookbehind
An assertion that peeks at the string to the left of the current match location.

loop
A construct that performs something repeatedly, like a roller coaster.

loop control statement
Any statement within the body of a loop that can make a loop prematurely stop looping
or skip an iteration. Generally, you shouldnXt try this on roller coasters.

loop label
A kind of key or name attached to a loop (or roller coaster) so that loop control
statements can talk about which loop they want to control.

lowercase
In Unicode, not just characters with the General Category of Lowercase Letter, but any
character with the Lowercase property, including Modifier Letters, Letter Numbers,
some Other Symbols, and one Combining Mark.

lvaluable
Able to serve as an lvalue.

lvalue
Term used by language lawyers for a storage location you can assign a new value to,
such as a variable or an element of an array. The XlX is short for XleftX, as in the
left side of an assignment, a typical place for lvalues. An lvaluable function or
expression is one to which a value may be assigned, as in "pos($x) = 10".

lvalue modifier
An adjectival pseudofunction that warps the meaning of an lvalue in some declarative
fashion. Currently there are three lvalue modifiers: "my", "our", and "local".

M
magic
Technically speaking, any extra semantics attached to a variable such as $!, $0, %ENV,
or %SIG, or to any tied variable. Magical things happen when you diddle those
variables.

magical increment
An increment operator that knows how to bump up ASCII alphabetics as well as numbers.

magical variables
Special variables that have side effects when you access them or assign to them. For
example, in Perl, changing elements of the %ENV array also changes the corresponding
environment variables that subprocesses will use. Reading the $! variable gives you
the current system error number or message.

Makefile
A file that controls the compilation of a program. Perl programs donXt usually need a
Makefile because the Perl compiler has plenty of self-control.

man The Unix program that displays online documentation (manual pages) for you.

manpage
A XpageX from the manuals, typically accessed via the man(1) command. A manpage
contains a SYNOPSIS, a DESCRIPTION, a list of BUGS, and so on, and is typically longer
than a page. There are manpages documenting commands, syscalls, library functions,
devices, protocols, files, and such. In this book, we call any piece of standard Perl
documentation (like perlop or perldelta) a manpage, no matter what format itXs
installed in on your system.

matching
See pattern matching.

member data
See instance variable.

memory
This always means your main memory, not your disk. Clouding the issue is the fact
that your machine may implement virtual memory; that is, it will pretend that it has
more memory than it really does, and itXll use disk space to hold inactive bits. This
can make it seem like you have a little more memory than you really do, but itXs not a
substitute for real memory. The best thing that can be said about virtual memory is
that it lets your performance degrade gradually rather than suddenly when you run out
of real memory. But your program can die when you run out of virtual memory, tooXif
you havenXt thrashed your disk to death first.

metacharacter
A character that is not supposed to be treated normally. Which characters are to be
treated specially as metacharacters varies greatly from context to context. Your shell
will have certain metacharacters, double-quoted Perl strings have other
metacharacters, and regular expression patterns have all the double-quote
metacharacters plus some extra ones of their own.

metasymbol
Something weXd call a metacharacter except that itXs a sequence of more than one
character. Generally, the first character in the sequence must be a true
metacharacter to get the other characters in the metasymbol to misbehave along with
it.

method
A kind of action that an object can take if you tell it to. See Camel chapter 12,
XObjectsX.

method resolution order
The path Perl takes through @INC. By default, this is a double depth first search,
once looking for defined methods and once for "AUTOLOAD". However, Perl lets you
configure this with "mro".

minicpan
A CPAN mirror that includes just the latest versions for each distribution, probably
created with "CPAN::Mini". See Camel chapter 19, XCPANX.

minimalism
The belief that Xsmall is beautifulX. Paradoxically, if you say something in a small
language, it turns out big, and if you say it in a big language, it turns out small.
Go figure.

mode
In the context of the stat(2) syscall, refers to the field holding the permission bits
and the type of the file.

modifier
See statement modifier, regular expression, and lvalue, not necessarily in that order.

module
A file that defines a package of (almost) the same name, which can either export
symbols or function as an object class. (A moduleXs main .pm file may also load in
other files in support of the module.) See the "use" built-in.

modulus
An integer divisor when youXre interested in the remainder instead of the quotient.

mojibake
When you speak one language and the computer thinks youXre speaking another. YouXll
see odd translations when you send UTFX8, for instance, but the computer thinks you
sent Latin-1, showing all sorts of weird characters instead. The term is written
XXXXXXin Japanese and means Xcharacter rotX, an apt description. Pronounced
["modXibake"] in standard IPA phonetics, or approximately Xmoh-jee-bah-kehX.

monger
Short for one member of Perl mongers, a purveyor of Perl.

mortal
A temporary value scheduled to die when the current statement finishes.

mro See method resolution order.

multidimensional array
An array with multiple subscripts for finding a single element. Perl implements these
using referencesXsee Camel chapter 9, XData StructuresX.

multiple inheritance
The features you got from your mother and father, mixed together unpredictably. (See
also inheritance and single inheritance.) In computer languages (including Perl), it
is the notion that a given class may have multiple direct ancestors or base classes.

N
named pipe
A pipe with a name embedded in the filesystem so that it can be accessed by two
unrelated processes.

namespace
A domain of names. You neednXt worry about whether the names in one such domain have
been used in another. See package.

NaN Not a number. The value Perl uses for certain invalid or inexpressible floating-point
operations.

network address
The most important attribute of a socket, like your telephoneXs telephone number.
Typically an IP address. See also port.

newline
A single character that represents the end of a line, with the ASCII value of 012
octal under Unix (but 015 on a Mac), and represented by "\n" in Perl strings. For
Windows machines writing text files, and for certain physical devices like terminals,
the single newline gets automatically translated by your C library into a line feed
and a carriage return, but normally, no translation is done.

NFS Network File System, which allows you to mount a remote filesystem as if it were
local.

normalization
Converting a text string into an alternate but equivalent canonical (or compatible)
representation that can then be compared for equivalence. Unicode recognizes four
different normalization forms: NFD, NFC, NFKD, and NFKC.

null character
A character with the numeric value of zero. ItXs used by C to terminate strings, but
Perl allows strings to contain a null.

null list
A list value with zero elements, represented in Perl by "()".

null string
A string containing no characters, not to be confused with a string containing a null
character, which has a positive length and is true.

numeric context
The situation in which an expression is expected by its surroundings (the code calling
it) to return a number. See also context and string context.

numification
(Sometimes spelled nummification and nummify.) Perl lingo for implicit conversion into
a number; the related verb is numify. Numification is intended to rhyme with
mummification, and numify with mummify. It is unrelated to English numen, numina,
numinous. We originally forgot the extra m a long time ago, and some people got used
to our funny spelling, and so just as with "HTTP_REFERER"Xs own missing letter, our
weird spelling has stuck around.

NV Short for Nevada, no part of which will ever be confused with civilization. NV also
means an internal floating- point Numeric Value of the type a scalar can hold, not to
be confused with an IV.

nybble
Half a byte, equivalent to one hexadecimal digit, and worth four bits.

O
object
An instance of a class. Something that XknowsX what user-defined type (class) it is,
and what it can do because of what class it is. Your program can request an object to
do things, but the object gets to decide whether it wants to do them or not. Some
objects are more accommodating than others.

octal
A number in base 8. Only the digits 0 through 7 are allowed. Octal constants in Perl
start with 0, as in 013. See also the "oct" function.

offset
How many things you have to skip over when moving from the beginning of a string or
array to a specific position within it. Thus, the minimum offset is zero, not one,
because you donXt skip anything to get to the first item.

one-liner
An entire computer program crammed into one line of text.

open source software
Programs for which the source code is freely available and freely redistributable,
with no commercial strings attached. For a more detailed definition, see
<http://www.opensource.org/osd.html>.

operand
An expression that yields a value that an operator operates on. See also precedence.

operating system
A special program that runs on the bare machine and hides the gory details of managing
processes and devices. Usually used in a looser sense to indicate a particular
culture of programming. The loose sense can be used at varying levels of specificity.
At one extreme, you might say that all versions of Unix and Unix-lookalikes are the
same operating system (upsetting many people, especially lawyers and other advocates).
At the other extreme, you could say this particular version of this particular
vendorXs operating system is different from any other version of this or any other
vendorXs operating system. Perl is much more portable across operating systems than
many other languages. See also architecture and platform.

operator
A gizmo that transforms some number of input values to some number of output values,
often built into a language with a special syntax or symbol. A given operator may have
specific expectations about what types of data you give as its arguments (operands)
and what type of data you want back from it.

operator overloading
A kind of overloading that you can do on built-in operators to make them work on
objects as if the objects were ordinary scalar values, but with the actual semantics
supplied by the object class. This is set up with the overload pragmaXsee Camel
chapter 13, XOverloadingX.

options
See either switches or regular expression modifiers.

ordinal
An abstract characterXs integer value. Same thing as codepoint.

overloading
Giving additional meanings to a symbol or construct. Actually, all languages do
overloading to one extent or another, since people are good at figuring out things
from context.

overriding
Hiding or invalidating some other definition of the same name. (Not to be confused
with overloading, which adds definitions that must be disambiguated some other way.)
To confuse the issue further, we use the word with two overloaded definitions: to
describe how you can define your own subroutine to hide a built-in function of the
same name (see the section XOverriding Built-in FunctionsX in Camel chapter 11,
XModulesX), and to describe how you can define a replacement method in a derived class
to hide a base classXs method of the same name (see Camel chapter 12, XObjectsX).

owner
The one user (apart from the superuser) who has absolute control over a file. A file
may also have a group of users who may exercise joint ownership if the real owner
permits it. See permission bits.

P
package
A namespace for global variables, subroutines, and the like, such that they can be
kept separate from like-named symbols in other namespaces. In a sense, only the
package is global, since the symbols in the packageXs symbol table are only accessible
from code compiled outside the package by naming the package. But in another sense,
all package symbols are also globalsXtheyXre just well-organized globals.

pad Short for scratchpad.

parameter
See argument.

parent class
See base class.

parse tree
See syntax tree.

parsing
The subtle but sometimes brutal art of attempting to turn your possibly malformed
program into a valid syntax tree.

patch
To fix by applying one, as it were. In the realm of hackerdom, a listing of the
differences between two versions of a program as might be applied by the patch(1)
program when you want to fix a bug or upgrade your old version.

PATH
The list of directories the system searches to find a program you want to execute.
The list is stored as one of your environment variables, accessible in Perl as
$ENV{PATH}.

pathname
A fully qualified filename such as /usr/bin/perl. Sometimes confused with "PATH".

pattern
A template used in pattern matching.

pattern matching
Taking a pattern, usually a regular expression, and trying the pattern various ways on
a string to see whether thereXs any way to make it fit. Often used to pick interesting
tidbits out of a file.

PAUSE
The Perl Authors Upload SErver (<http://pause.perl.org>), the gateway for modules on
their way to CPAN.

Perl mongers
A Perl user group, taking the form of its name from the New York Perl mongers, the
first Perl user group. Find one near you at <http://www.pm.org>.

permission bits
Bits that the owner of a file sets or unsets to allow or disallow access to other
people. These flag bits are part of the mode word returned by the "stat" built-in when
you ask about a file. On Unix systems, you can check the ls(1) manpage for more
information.

Pern
What you get when you do "Perl++" twice. Doing it only once will curl your hair. You
have to increment it eight times to shampoo your hair. Lather, rinse, iterate.

pipe
A direct connection that carries the output of one process to the input of another
without an intermediate temporary file. Once the pipe is set up, the two processes in
question can read and write as if they were talking to a normal file, with some
caveats.

pipeline
A series of processes all in a row, linked by pipes, where each passes its output
stream to the next.

platform
The entire hardware and software context in which a program runs. A program written in
a platform-dependent language might break if you change any of the following: machine,
operating system, libraries, compiler, or system configuration. The perl interpreter
has to be compiled differently for each platform because it is implemented in C, but
programs written in the Perl language are largely platform independent.

pod The markup used to embed documentation into your Perl code. Pod stands for XPlain old
documentationX. See Camel chapter 23, XPlain Old DocumentationX.

pod command
A sequence, such as "=head1", that denotes the start of a pod section.

pointer
A variable in a language like C that contains the exact memory location of some other
item. Perl handles pointers internally so you donXt have to worry about them. Instead,
you just use symbolic pointers in the form of keys and variable names, or hard
references, which arenXt pointers (but act like pointers and do in fact contain
pointers).

polymorphism
The notion that you can tell an object to do something generic, and the object will
interpret the command in different ways depending on its type. [< Greek XXXX- + XXXXX,
many forms.]

port
The part of the address of a TCP or UDP socket that directs packets to the correct
process after finding the right machine, something like the phone extension you give
when you reach the company operator. Also the result of converting code to run on a
different platform than originally intended, or the verb denoting this conversion.

portable
Once upon a time, C code compilable under both BSD and SysV. In general, code that can
be easily converted to run on another platform, where XeasilyX can be defined however
you like, and usually is. Anything may be considered portable if you try hard enough,
such as a mobile home or London Bridge.

porter
Someone who XcarriesX software from one platform to another. Porting programs written
in platform-dependent languages such as C can be difficult work, but porting programs
like Perl is very much worth the agony.

possessive
Said of quantifiers and groups in patterns that refuse to give up anything once
theyXve gotten their mitts on it. Catchier and easier to say than the even more formal
nonbacktrackable.

POSIX
The Portable Operating System Interface specification.

postfix
An operator that follows its operand, as in "$x++".

pp An internal shorthand for a Xpush- popX code; that is, C code implementing PerlXs
stack machine.

pragma
A standard module whose practical hints and suggestions are received (and possibly
ignored) at compile time. Pragmas are named in all lowercase.

precedence
The rules of conduct that, in the absence of other guidance, determine what should
happen first. For example, in the absence of parentheses, you always do
multiplication before addition.

prefix
An operator that precedes its operand, as in "++$x".

preprocessing
What some helper process did to transform the incoming data into a form more suitable
for the current process. Often done with an incoming pipe. See also C preprocessor.

primary maintainer
The author that PAUSE allows to assign co-maintainer permissions to a namespace. A
primary maintainer can give up this distinction by assigning it to another PAUSE
author. See Camel chapter 19, XCPANX.

procedure
A subroutine.

process
An instance of a running program. Under multitasking systems like Unix, two or more
separate processes could be running the same program independently at the same timeXin
fact, the "fork" function is designed to bring about this happy state of affairs.
Under other operating systems, processes are sometimes called XthreadsX, XtasksX, or
XjobsX, often with slight nuances in meaning.

program
See script.

program generator
A system that algorithmically writes code for you in a high-level language. See also
code generator.

progressive matching
Pattern matching matching>that picks up where it left off before.

property
See either instance variable or character property.

protocol
In networking, an agreed-upon way of sending messages back and forth so that neither
correspondent will get too confused.

prototype
An optional part of a subroutine declaration telling the Perl compiler how many and
what flavor of arguments may be passed as actual arguments, so you can write
subroutine calls that parse much like built-in functions. (Or donXt parse, as the case
may be.)

pseudofunction
A construct that sometimes looks like a function but really isnXt. Usually reserved
for lvalue modifiers like "my", for context modifiers like "scalar", and for the pick-
your-own-quotes constructs, "q//", "qq//", "qx//", "qw//", "qr//", "m//", "s///",
"y///", and "tr///".

pseudohash
Formerly, a reference to an array whose initial element happens to hold a reference to
a hash. You used to be able to treat a pseudohash reference as either an array
reference or a hash reference. Pseduohashes are no longer supported.

pseudoliteral
An operator X"that looks something like a literal, such as the output-grabbing
operator, <literal moreinfo="none""`>"command""`".

public domain
Something not owned by anybody. Perl is copyrighted and is thus not in the public
domainXitXs just freely available and freely redistributable.

pumpkin
A notional XbatonX handed around the Perl community indicating who is the lead
integrator in some arena of development.

pumpking
A pumpkin holder, the person in charge of pumping the pump, or at least priming it.
Must be willing to play the part of the Great Pumpkin now and then.

PV A Xpointer valueX, which is Perl Internals Talk for a "char*".

Q
qualified
Possessing a complete name. The symbol $Ent::moot is qualified; $moot is unqualified.
A fully qualified filename is specified from the top-level directory.

quantifier
A component of a regular expression specifying how many times the foregoing atom may
occur.

R
race condition
A race condition exists when the result of several interrelated events depends on the
ordering of those events, but that order cannot be guaranteed due to nondeterministic
timing effects. If two or more programs, or parts of the same program, try to go
through the same series of events, one might interrupt the work of the other. This is
a good way to find an exploit.

readable
With respect to files, one that has the proper permission bit set to let you access
the file. With respect to computer programs, one thatXs written well enough that
someone has a chance of figuring out what itXs trying to do.

reaping
The last rites performed by a parent process on behalf of a deceased child process so
that it doesnXt remain a zombie. See the "wait" and "waitpid" function calls.

record
A set of related data values in a file or stream, often associated with a unique key
field. In Unix, often commensurate with a line, or a blank-lineXterminated set of
lines (a XparagraphX). Each line of the /etc/passwd file is a record, keyed on login
name, containing information about that user.

recursion
The art of defining something (at least partly) in terms of itself, which is a naughty
no-no in dictionaries but often works out okay in computer programs if youXre careful
not to recurse forever (which is like an infinite loop with more spectacular failure
modes).

reference
Where you look to find a pointer to information somewhere else. (See indirection.)
References come in two flavors: symbolic references and hard references.

referent
Whatever a reference refers to, which may or may not have a name. Common types of
referents include scalars, arrays, hashes, and subroutines.

regex
See regular expression.

regular expression
A single entity with various interpretations, like an elephant. To a computer
scientist, itXs a grammar for a little language in which some strings are legal and
others arenXt. To normal people, itXs a pattern you can use to find what youXre
looking for when it varies from case to case. PerlXs regular expressions are far from
regular in the theoretical sense, but in regular use they work quite well. HereXs a
regular expression: "/Oh s.*t./". This will match strings like X"Oh say can you see by
the dawn's early light"X and X"Oh sit!"X. See Camel chapter 5, XPattern MatchingX.

regular expression modifier
An option on a pattern or substitution, such as "/i" to render the pattern case-
insensitive.

regular file
A file thatXs not a directory, a device, a named pipe or socket, or a symbolic link.
Perl uses the "Xf" file test operator to identify regular files. Sometimes called a
XplainX file.

relational operator
An operator that says whether a particular ordering relationship is true about a pair
of operands. Perl has both numeric and string relational operators. See collating
sequence.

reserved words
A word with a specific, built-in meaning to a compiler, such as "if" or "delete". In
many languages (not Perl), itXs illegal to use reserved words to name anything else.
(Which is why theyXre reserved, after all.) In Perl, you just canXt use them to name
labels or filehandles. Also called XkeywordsX.

return value
The value produced by a subroutine or expression when evaluated. In Perl, a return
value may be either a list or a scalar.

RFC Request For Comment, which despite the timid connotations is the name of a series of
important standards documents.

right shift
A bit shift that divides a number by some power of 2.

role
A name for a concrete set of behaviors. A role is a way to add behavior to a class
without inheritance.

root
The superuser ("UID" == 0). Also the top-level directory of the filesystem.

RTFM
What you are told when someone thinks you should Read The Fine Manual.

run phase
Any time after Perl starts running your main program. See also compile phase. Run
phase is mostly spent in runtime but may also be spent in compile time when "require",
"do" "FILE", or "eval" "STRING" operators are executed, or when a substitution uses
the "/ee" modifier.

runtime
The time when Perl is actually doing what your code says to do, as opposed to the
earlier period of time when it was trying to figure out whether what you said made any
sense whatsoever, which is compile time.

runtime pattern
A pattern that contains one or more variables to be interpolated before parsing the
pattern as a regular expression, and that therefore cannot be analyzed at compile
time, but must be reanalyzed each time the pattern match operator is evaluated.
Runtime patterns are useful but expensive.

RV A recreational vehicle, not to be confused with vehicular recreation. RV also means an
internal Reference Value of the type a scalar can hold. See also IV and NV if youXre
not confused yet.

rvalue
A value that you might find on the right side of an assignment. See also lvalue.

S
sandbox
A walled off area thatXs not supposed to affect beyond its walls. You let kids play in
the sandbox instead of running in the road. See Camel chapter 20, XSecurityX.

scalar
A simple, singular value; a number, string, or reference.

scalar context
The situation in which an expression is expected by its surroundings (the code calling
it) to return a single value rather than a list of values. See also context and list
context. A scalar context sometimes imposes additional constraints on the return
valueXsee string context and numeric context. Sometimes we talk about a Boolean
context inside conditionals, but this imposes no additional constraints, since any
scalar value, whether numeric or string, is already true or false.

scalar literal
A number or quoted stringXan actual value in the text of your program, as opposed to a
variable.

scalar value
A value that happens to be a scalar as opposed to a list.

scalar variable
A variable prefixed with "$" that holds a single value.

scope
From how far away you can see a variable, looking through one. Perl has two visibility
mechanisms. It does dynamic scoping of "local" variables, meaning that the rest of the
block, and any subroutines that are called by the rest of the block, can see the
variables that are local to the block. Perl does lexical scoping of "my" variables,
meaning that the rest of the block can see the variable, but other subroutines called
by the block cannot see the variable.

scratchpad
The area in which a particular invocation of a particular file or subroutine keeps
some of its temporary values, including any lexically scoped variables.

script
A text file that is a program intended to be executed directly rather than compiled to
another form of file before execution.

Also, in the context of Unicode, a writing system for a particular language or group
of languages, such as Greek, Bengali, or Tengwar.

script kiddie
A cracker who is not a hacker but knows just enough to run canned scripts. A cargo-
cult programmer.

sed A venerable Stream EDitor from which Perl derives some of its ideas.

semaphore
A fancy kind of interlock that prevents multiple threads or processes from using up
the same resources simultaneously.

separator
A character or string that keeps two surrounding strings from being confused with each
other. The "split" function works on separators. Not to be confused with delimiters or
terminators. The XorX in the previous sentence separated the two alternatives.

serialization
Putting a fancy data structure into linear order so that it can be stored as a string
in a disk file or database, or sent through a pipe. Also called marshalling.

server
In networking, a process that either advertises a service or just hangs around at a
known location and waits for clients who need service to get in touch with it.

service
Something you do for someone else to make them happy, like giving them the time of day
(or of their life). On some machines, well-known services are listed by the
"getservent" function.

setgid
Same as setuid, only having to do with giving away group privileges.

setuid
Said of a program that runs with the privileges of its owner rather than (as is
usually the case) the privileges of whoever is running it. Also describes the bit in
the mode word (permission bits) that controls the feature. This bit must be explicitly
set by the owner to enable this feature, and the program must be carefully written not
to give away more privileges than it ought to.

shared memory
A piece of memory accessible by two different processes who otherwise would not see
each otherXs memory.

shebang
Irish for the whole McGillicuddy. In Perl culture, a portmanteau of XsharpX and
XbangX, meaning the "#!" sequence that tells the system where to find the interpreter.

shell
A command-line interpreter. The program that interactively gives you a prompt, accepts
one or more lines of input, and executes the programs you mentioned, feeding each of
them their proper arguments and input data. Shells can also execute scripts containing
such commands. Under Unix, typical shells include the Bourne shell (/bin/sh), the C
shell (/bin/csh), and the Korn shell (/bin/ksh). Perl is not strictly a shell because
itXs not interactive (although Perl programs can be interactive).

side effects
Something extra that happens when you evaluate an expression. Nowadays it can refer to
almost anything. For example, evaluating a simple assignment statement typically has
the Xside effectX of assigning a value to a variable. (And you thought assigning the
value was your primary intent in the first place!) Likewise, assigning a value to the
special variable $| ($AUTOFLUSH) has the side effect of forcing a flush after every
"write" or "print" on the currently selected filehandle.

sigil
A glyph used in magic. Or, for Perl, the symbol in front of a variable name, such as
"$", "@", and "%".

signal
A bolt out of the blue; that is, an event triggered by the operating system, probably
when youXre least expecting it.

signal handler
A subroutine that, instead of being content to be called in the normal fashion, sits
around waiting for a bolt out of the blue before it will deign to execute. Under Perl,
bolts out of the blue are called signals, and you send them with the "kill" built-in.
See the %SIG hash in Camel chapter 25, XSpecial NamesX and the section XSignalsX in
Camel chapter 15, XInterprocess CommunicationX.

single inheritance
The features you got from your mother, if she told you that you donXt have a father.
(See also inheritance and multiple inheritance.) In computer languages, the idea that
classes reproduce asexually so that a given class can only have one direct ancestor or
base class. Perl supplies no such restriction, though you may certainly program Perl
that way if you like.

slice
A selection of any number of elements from a list, array, or hash.

slurp
To read an entire file into a string in one operation.

socket
An endpoint for network communication among multiple processes that works much like a
telephone or a post office box. The most important thing about a socket is its network
address (like a phone number). Different kinds of sockets have different kinds of
addressesXsome look like filenames, and some donXt.

soft reference
See symbolic reference.

source filter
A special kind of module that does preprocessing on your script just before it gets to
the tokener.

stack
A device you can put things on the top of, and later take them back off in the
opposite order in which you put them on. See LIFO.

standard
Included in the official Perl distribution, as in a standard module, a standard tool,
or a standard Perl manpage.

standard error
The default output stream for nasty remarks that donXt belong in standard output.
Represented within a Perl program by the output> filehandle "STDERR". You can use
this stream explicitly, but the "die" and "warn" built-ins write to your standard
error stream automatically (unless trapped or otherwise intercepted).

standard input
The default input stream for your program, which if possible shouldnXt care where its
data is coming from. Represented within a Perl program by the filehandle "STDIN".

standard I/O
A standard C library for doing buffered input and output to the operating system. (The
XstandardX of standard I/O is at most marginally related to the XstandardX of standard
input and output.) In general, Perl relies on whatever implementation of standard I/O
a given operating system supplies, so the buffering characteristics of a Perl program
on one machine may not exactly match those on another machine. Normally this only
influences efficiency, not semantics. If your standard I/O package is doing block
buffering and you want it to flush the buffer more often, just set the $| variable to
a true value.

Standard Library
Everything that comes with the official perl distribution. Some vendor versions of
perl change their distributions, leaving out some parts or including extras. See also
dual-lived.

standard output
The default output stream for your program, which if possible shouldnXt care where its
data is going. Represented within a Perl program by the filehandle "STDOUT".

statement
A command to the computer about what to do next, like a step in a recipe: XAdd
marmalade to batter and mix until mixed.X A statement is distinguished from a
declaration, which doesnXt tell the computer to do anything, but just to learn
something.

statement modifier
A conditional or loop that you put after the statement instead of before, if you know
what we mean.

static
Varying slowly compared to something else. (Unfortunately, everything is relatively
stable compared to something else, except for certain elementary particles, and weXre
not so sure about them.) In computers, where things are supposed to vary rapidly,
XstaticX has a derogatory connotation, indicating a slightly dysfunctional variable,
subroutine, or method. In Perl culture, the word is politely avoided.

If youXre a C or C++ programmer, you might be looking for PerlXs "state" keyword.

static method
No such thing. See class method.

static scoping
No such thing. See lexical scoping.

static variable
No such thing. Just use a lexical variable in a scope larger than your subroutine, or
declare it with "state" instead of with "my".

stat structure
A special internal spot in which Perl keeps the information about the last file on
which you requested information.

status
The value returned to the parent process when one of its child processes dies. This
value is placed in the special variable $?. Its upper eight bits are the exit status
of the defunct process, and its lower eight bits identify the signal (if any) that the
process died from. On Unix systems, this status value is the same as the status word
returned by wait(2). See "system" in Camel chapter 27, XFunctionsX.

STDERR
See standard error.

STDIN
See standard input.

STDIO
See standard I/O.

STDOUT
See standard output.

stream
A flow of data into or out of a process as a steady sequence of bytes or characters,
without the appearance of being broken up into packets. This is a kind of
interfaceXthe underlying implementation may well break your data up into separate
packets for delivery, but this is hidden from you.

string
A sequence of characters such as XHe said !@#*&%@#*?!X. A string does not have to be
entirely printable.

string context
The situation in which an expression is expected by its surroundings (the code calling
it) to return a string. See also context and numeric context.

stringification
The process of producing a string representation of an abstract object.

struct
C keyword introducing a structure definition or name.

structure
See data structure.

subclass
See derived class.

subpattern
A component of a regular expression pattern.

subroutine
A named or otherwise accessible piece of program that can be invoked from elsewhere in
the program in order to accomplish some subgoal of the program. A subroutine is often
parameterized to accomplish different but related things depending on its input
arguments. If the subroutine returns a meaningful value, it is also called a function.

subscript
A value that indicates the position of a particular array element in an array.

substitution
Changing parts of a string via the "s///" operator. (We avoid use of this term to mean
variable interpolation.)

substring
A portion of a string, starting at a certain character position (offset) and
proceeding for a certain number of characters.

superclass
See base class.

superuser
The person whom the operating system will let do almost anything. Typically your
system administrator or someone pretending to be your system administrator. On Unix
systems, the root user. On Windows systems, usually the Administrator user.

SV Short for Xscalar valueX. But within the Perl interpreter, every referent is treated
as a member of a class derived from SV, in an object-oriented sort of way. Every value
inside Perl is passed around as a C language "SV*" pointer. The SV struct knows its
own Xreferent typeX, and the code is smart enough (we hope) not to try to call a hash
function on a subroutine.

switch
An option you give on a command line to influence the way your program works, usually
introduced with a minus sign. The word is also used as a nickname for a switch
statement.

switch cluster
The combination of multiple command- line switches (e.g., "Xa Xb Xc") into one switch
(e.g., "Xabc"). Any switch with an additional argument must be the last switch in a
cluster.

switch statement
A program technique that lets you evaluate an expression and then, based on the value
of the expression, do a multiway branch to the appropriate piece of code for that
value. Also called a Xcase structureX, named after the similar Pascal construct. Most
switch statements in Perl are spelled "given". See XThe "given" statementX in Camel
chapter 4, XStatements and DeclarationsX.

symbol
Generally, any token or metasymbol. Often used more specifically to mean the sort of
name you might find in a symbol table.

symbolic debugger
A program that lets you step through the execution of your program, stopping or
printing things out here and there to see whether anything has gone wrong, and, if so,
what. The XsymbolicX part just means that you can talk to the debugger using the same
symbols with which your program is written.

symbolic link
An alternate filename that points to the real filename, which in turn points to the
real file. Whenever the operating system is trying to parse a pathname containing a
symbolic link, it merely substitutes the new name and continues parsing.

symbolic reference
A variable whose value is the name of another variable or subroutine. By dereferencing
the first variable, you can get at the second one. Symbolic references are illegal
under "use strict "refs"".

symbol table
Where a compiler remembers symbols. A program like Perl must somehow remember all the
names of all the variables, filehandles, and subroutines youXve used. It does this by
placing the names in a symbol table, which is implemented in Perl using a hash table.
There is a separate symbol table for each package to give each package its own
namespace.

synchronous
Programming in which the orderly sequence of events can be determined; that is, when
things happen one after the other, not at the same time.

syntactic sugar
An alternative way of writing something more easily; a shortcut.

syntax
From Greek XXXXXXXX, Xwith-arrangementX. How things (particularly symbols) are put
together with each other.

syntax tree
An internal representation of your program wherein lower-level constructs dangle off
the higher-level constructs enclosing them.

syscall
A function call directly to the operating system. Many of the important subroutines
and functions you use arenXt direct system calls, but are built up in one or more
layers above the system call level. In general, Perl programmers donXt need to worry
about the distinction. However, if you do happen to know which Perl functions are
really syscalls, you can predict which of these will set the $! ($ERRNO) variable on
failure. Unfortunately, beginning programmers often confusingly employ the term
Xsystem callX to mean what happens when you call the Perl "system" function, which
actually involves many syscalls. To avoid any confusion, we nearly always say
XsyscallX for something you could call indirectly via PerlXs "syscall" function, and
never for something you would call with PerlXs "system" function.

T
taint checks
The special bookkeeping Perl does to track the flow of external data through your
program and disallow their use in system commands.

tainted
Said of data derived from the grubby hands of a user, and thus unsafe for a secure
program to rely on. Perl does taint checks if you run a setuid (or setgid) program, or
if you use the "XT" switch.

taint mode
Running under the "XT" switch, marking all external data as suspect and refusing to
use it with system commands. See Camel chapter 20, XSecurityX.

TCP Short for Transmission Control Protocol. A protocol wrapped around the Internet
Protocol to make an unreliable packet transmission mechanism appear to the application
program to be a reliable stream of bytes. (Usually.)

term
Short for a XterminalXXthat is, a leaf node of a syntax tree. A thing that functions
grammatically as an operand for the operators in an expression.

terminator
A character or string that marks the end of another string. The $/ variable contains
the string that terminates a "readline" operation, which "chomp" deletes from the end.
Not to be confused with delimiters or separators. The period at the end of this
sentence is a terminator.

ternary
An operator taking three operands. Sometimes pronounced trinary.

text
A string or file containing primarily printable characters.

thread
Like a forked process, but without forkXs inherent memory protection. A thread is
lighter weight than a full process, in that a process could have multiple threads
running around in it, all fighting over the same processXs memory space unless steps
are taken to protect threads from one another.

tie The bond between a magical variable and its implementation class. See the "tie"
function in Camel chapter 27, XFunctionsX and Camel chapter 14, XTied VariablesX.

titlecase
The case used for capitals that are followed by lowercase characters instead of by
more capitals. Sometimes called sentence case or headline case. English doesnXt use
Unicode titlecase, but casing rules for English titles are more complicated than
simply capitalizing each wordXs first character.

TMTOWTDI
ThereXs More Than One Way To Do It, the Perl Motto. The notion that there can be more
than one valid path to solving a programming problem in context. (This doesnXt mean
that more ways are always better or that all possible paths are equally desirableXjust
that there need not be One True Way.)

token
A morpheme in a programming language, the smallest unit of text with semantic
significance.

tokener
A module that breaks a program text into a sequence of tokens for later analysis by a
parser.

tokenizing
Splitting up a program text into tokens. Also known as XlexingX, in which case you get
XlexemesX instead of tokens.

toolbox approach
The notion that, with a complete set of simple tools that work well together, you can
build almost anything you want. Which is fine if youXre assembling a tricycle, but if
youXre building a defranishizing comboflux regurgalator, you really want your own
machine shop in which to build special tools. Perl is sort of a machine shop.

topic
The thing youXre working on. Structures like "while(<>)", "for", "foreach", and
"given" set the topic for you by assigning to $_, the default (topic) variable.

transliterate
To turn one string representation into another by mapping each character of the source
string to its corresponding character in the result string. Not to be confused with
translation: for example, Greek XXXXXXXXXX transliterates into polychromos but
translates into many-colored. See the "tr///" operator in Camel chapter 5, XPattern
MatchingX.

trigger
An event that causes a handler to be run.

trinary
Not a stellar system with three stars, but an operator taking three operands.
Sometimes pronounced ternary.

troff
A venerable typesetting language from which Perl derives the name of its $% variable
and which is secretly used in the production of Camel books.

true
Any scalar value that doesnXt evaluate to 0 or "".

truncating
Emptying a file of existing contents, either automatically when opening a file for
writing or explicitly via the "truncate" function.

type
See data type and class.

type casting
Converting data from one type to another. C permits this. Perl does not need it. Nor
want it.

typedef
A type definition in the C and C++ languages.

typed lexical
A lexical variable lexical>that is declared with a class type: "my Pony $bill".

typeglob
Use of a single identifier, prefixed with "*". For example, *name stands for any or
all of $name, @name, %name, &name, or just "name". How you use it determines whether
it is interpreted as all or only one of them. See XTypeglobs and FilehandlesX in Camel
chapter 2, XBits and PiecesX.

typemap
A description of how C types may be transformed to and from Perl types within an
extension module written in XS.

U
UDP User Datagram Protocol, the typical way to send datagrams over the Internet.

UID A user ID. Often used in the context of file or process ownership.

umask
A mask of those permission bits that should be forced off when creating files or
directories, in order to establish a policy of whom youXll ordinarily deny access to.
See the "umask" function.

unary operator
An operator with only one operand, like "!" or "chdir". Unary operators are usually
prefix operators; that is, they precede their operand. The "++" and "XX" operators can
be either prefix or postfix. (Their position does change their meanings.)

Unicode
A character set comprising all the major character sets of the world, more or less.
See <http://www.unicode.org>.

Unix
A very large and constantly evolving language with several alternative and largely
incompatible syntaxes, in which anyone can define anything any way they choose, and
usually do. Speakers of this language think itXs easy to learn because itXs so easily
twisted to oneXs own ends, but dialectical differences make tribal intercommunication
nearly impossible, and travelers are often reduced to a pidgin-like subset of the
language. To be universally understood, a Unix shell programmer must spend years of
study in the art. Many have abandoned this discipline and now communicate via an
Esperanto-like language called Perl.

In ancient times, Unix was also used to refer to some code that a couple of people at
Bell Labs wrote to make use of a PDP-7 computer that wasnXt doing much of anything
else at the time.

uppercase
In Unicode, not just characters with the General Category of Uppercase Letter, but any
character with the Uppercase property, including some Letter Numbers and Symbols. Not
to be confused with titlecase.

V
value
An actual piece of data, in contrast to all the variables, references, keys, indices,
operators, and whatnot that you need to access the value.

variable
A named storage location that can hold any of various kinds of value, as your program
sees fit.

variable interpolation
The interpolation of a scalar or array variable into a string.

variadic
Said of a function that happily receives an indeterminate number of actual arguments.

vector
Mathematical jargon for a list of scalar values.

virtual
Providing the appearance of something without the reality, as in: virtual memory is
not real memory. (See also memory.) The opposite of XvirtualX is XtransparentX, which
means providing the reality of something without the appearance, as in: Perl handles
the variable-length UTFX8 character encoding transparently.

void context
A form of scalar context in which an expression is not expected to return any value at
all and is evaluated for its side effects alone.

v-string
A XversionX or XvectorX string specified with a "v" followed by a series of decimal
integers in dot notation, for instance, "v1.20.300.4000". Each number turns into a
character with the specified ordinal value. (The "v" is optional when there are at
least three integers.)

W
warning
A message printed to the "STDERR" stream to the effect that something might be wrong
but isnXt worth blowing up over. See "warn" in Camel chapter 27, XFunctionsX and the
"warnings" pragma in Camel chapter 28, XPragmantic ModulesX.

watch expression
An expression which, when its value changes, causes a breakpoint in the Perl debugger.

weak reference
A reference that doesnXt get counted normally. When all the normal references to data
disappear, the data disappears. These are useful for circular references that would
never disappear otherwise.

whitespace
A character that moves your cursor but doesnXt otherwise put anything on your screen.
Typically refers to any of: space, tab, line feed, carriage return, or form feed. In
Unicode, matches many other characters that Unicode considers whitespace, including
the X-XX .

word
In normal XcomputereseX, the piece of data of the size most efficiently handled by
your computer, typically 32 bits or so, give or take a few powers of 2. In Perl
culture, it more often refers to an alphanumeric identifier (including underscores),
or to a string of nonwhitespace characters bounded by whitespace or string boundaries.

working directory
Your current directory, from which relative pathnames are interpreted by the operating
system. The operating system knows your current directory because you told it with a
"chdir", or because you started out in the place where your parent process was when
you were born.

wrapper
A program or subroutine that runs some other program or subroutine for you, modifying
some of its input or output to better suit your purposes.

WYSIWYG
What You See Is What You Get. Usually used when something that appears on the screen
matches how it will eventually look, like PerlXs "format" declarations. Also used to
mean the opposite of magic because everything works exactly as it appears, as in the
three- argument form of "open".

X
XS An extraordinarily exported, expeditiously excellent, expressly eXternal Subroutine,
executed in existing C or C++ or in an exciting extension language called
(exasperatingly) XS.

XSUB
An external subroutine defined in XS.

Y
yacc
Yet Another Compiler Compiler. A parser generator without which Perl probably would
not have existed. See the file perly.y in the Perl source distribution.

Z
zero width
A subpattern assertion matching the null string between characters.

zombie
A process that has died (exited) but whose parent has not yet received proper
notification of its demise by virtue of having called "wait" or "waitpid". If you
"fork", you must clean up after your child processes when they exit; otherwise, the
process table will fill up and your system administrator will Not Be Happy with you.

AUTHOR AND COPYRIGHT


Based on the Glossary of Programming Perl, Fourth Edition, by Tom Christiansen, brian d
foy, Larry Wall, & Jon Orwant. Copyright (c) 2000, 1996, 1991, 2012 O'Reilly Media, Inc.
This document may be distributed under the same terms as Perl itself.

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