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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T20:58:11+00:00 2026-05-10T20:58:11+00:00

I’m trying to understand a particular Perl code from vcake . Usually I find

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I’m trying to understand a particular Perl code from vcake. Usually I find my way around in Perl but the following statement baffles me. I suspect that this is simply an error but I’m not completely sure. The statement is:

foreach my $seq (keys %$set) {     if( (defined $set->{$seq}) and (my $numReads >= ($coverage)) ) {         do something;     }     ... } 

$coverage has been defined at the beginning of the file as a scalar integer (e.g. 10) and is never again written to. $numReads is only used in the line above, nowhere else!

$set, on the other hand, is modified inside the loop so the first part of the condition makes perfect sense. What I don’t understand is the second part because as I see it, this will always evaluate to the same value and I don’t understand the significance of $numReads or >= here. Can someone please enlighten me? Are there perhaps invisible automatic variables involved?

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  1. 2026-05-10T20:58:11+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 8:58 pm

    my $numReads means: Create a new local variable within the context of the foreach loop. Its initial value is undef, which in numerical context is treated as 0. So the code reads:

    if ((...) and (0 >= ($coverage)) ) { } 

    which means ‘do something’ is never executed unless $coverage is set to 0 or less.

    If this was debug code, I’d assume that $coverage is used to enable/disable this statement.

    My guess is: You’ve found a bug.

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