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Selected Reading
V-Strings in Perl
A literal of the form v1.20.300.4000 is parsed as a string composed of characters with the specified ordinals. This form is known as v-strings.
A v-string provides an alternative and more readable way to construct strings, rather than use the somewhat less readable interpolation form "\x{1}\x{14}\x{12c}\x{fa0}".
They are any literal that begins with a v and is followed by one or more dot-separated elements. For example −
Example
#!/usr/bin/perl $smile = v9786; $foo = v102.111.111; $martin = v77.97.114.116.105.110; print "smile = $smile\n"; print "foo = $foo\n"; print "martin = $martin\n";
Output
This will also produce the same result −
smile = ? foo = foo martin = Martin Wide character in print at main.pl line 7.
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