You want to return a value indicating that your function failed.
Use a bare
return
statement without any argument, which returns
undef
in scalar context and the empty list
()
in list context.
return;
A
return
without an argument means:
sub empty_retval { return ( wantarray ? () : undef ); }
You can't use just
return
undef
because in list context you will get a list of one value:
undef
. If your caller says:
if (@a = yourfunc()) { ... }
Then the "error" condition will be perceived as true, because
@a
will be assigned (
undef
) and then evaluated in scalar context. This yields
1
, the number of elements in
@a
, which is true. You could use the
wantarray
function to see what context you were called in, but a bare
return
is a clear and tidy solution that always works:
unless ($a = sfunc()) { die "sfunc failed" } unless (@a = afunc()) { die "afunc failed" } unless (%a = hfunc()) { die "hfunc failed" }
Some of Perl's built-in functions have a peculiar return value. Both
fcntl
and
ioctl
have the curious habit of returning the string
"0
but
true"
in some circumstances. (This magic string is conveniently exempt from the
-w
flag's incessant numerical conversion warnings.) This has the advantage of letting you write code like this:
ioctl(....) or die "can't ioctl: $!";
That way, code doesn't have to check for a defined zero as distinct from the undefined value, as it would for the
read
or
glob
functions.
"0
but
true"
is zero when used numerically. It's rare that this kind of return value is needed. A more common (and spectacular) way to indicate failure in a function is to raise an exception, as described in
Recipe 10.12
.
The
undef
,
wantarray
, and
return
functions in
Chapter 3
of
Programming Perl
and
perlfunc
(1);
Recipe 10.12
Copyright © 2001 O'Reilly & Associates. All rights reserved.