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Home/ Questions/Q 7606335
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 31, 20262026-05-31T00:23:03+00:00 2026-05-31T00:23:03+00:00

I’m attempting to call a nested recursive perl function, but I can’t tack the

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I’m attempting to call a nested recursive perl function, but I can’t tack the correct syntax.

Question: What is the correct syntax to perform a recursive call for a nested function (if nested functions should be recursively called at all)?

Answer: Refer to suggested pseudocode in the accepted answer.

Here is a pseudocode snippet:

use Scalar::Util;
sub outerfunction {
  my $innerfunction = sub {
    # Do something
    innerfunction(); 
    # Do other things
  }; 
  Scalar::Util::weaken($innerfunction); 
  &$innerfunction(@_);
}; 

I’ve tried to invoke innerfunction as the following (with the consequential error messages):

innerfunction

Undefined subroutine &main::innerfunction

&innerfunction

Undefined subroutine &main::innerfunction

&$innerfunction

Global symbol “$innerfunction” requires explicit package name

I’ve also tried to declare the innerfunction as local, but receive the following:

Global symbol “$innerfunction” requires explicit package name

I don’t have much experience with interpreted languages, so any incidental commentary related to memory/stack leakage/ corruption or other dangers with the above pseudocode (other than system limits on recursion) would be greatly appreciated as well.

Thanks!
perl v5.10.1 running on Linux 2.6.34.7-61.fc13.x86_64

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-31T00:23:05+00:00Added an answer on May 31, 2026 at 12:23 am

    The innerfunction() syntax is only available for subroutines that have been installed into the symbol table (such as the sub NAME {...} syntax does). You need to call your inner function as $innerfunction->() or &$innerfunction(), but where you are having trouble is with the scoping of the $innerfunction lexical.

    When you declare a variable with my, the variable is in scope after that statement ends. So you need to split your declaration:

     my $innerfunction;
        $innerfunction = sub {
            ...
            $innerfunction->();
            ...
        };
    

    To break the circular reference with weaken the usual pattern is:

    use Scalar::Util;
    sub outer_function {
        my $weak_ref;
        $weak_ref = my $strong_ref = sub {
            # Do something
            $weak_ref->(); 
            # Do other things
        };
        Scalar::Util::weaken($weak_ref); 
        return $strong_ref;
    };
    

    So now, as soon as $strong_ref goes out of scope, the subroutine will be garbage collected.

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