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Home/ Questions/Q 1090061
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T23:19:00+00:00 2026-05-16T23:19:00+00:00

I’m trying to write the following recursive function. The problem is that it never

  • 0

I’m trying to write the following recursive function. The problem is that it never ends and I can’t understand why:

    sub do_smth(@first, @second){
    my @tmp_first = @first;
    $tmp = shift(@tmp_first);
    if (@tmp_first > 0){
        do_smth(@tmp_first, @second);
    }
    my @tmp_second = @second;
    $tmp = shift(@tmp_second);
    if (@tmp_second > 0){
        do_smth(@first, @tmp_second);
    }

}
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T23:19:01+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 11:19 pm

    This code does not even compile. Without warnings and strict you will get these errors:

    Type of arg 1 to shift must be array (not scalar dereference) at so.pl line 5, near "$tmp_first)"
    Type of arg 1 to shift must be array (not scalar dereference) at so.pl line 10, near "$tmp_second)"
    Execution aborted due to compilation errors.
    

    and with warnings and strict:

    Illegal character in prototype for main::do_smth : @first,@second at so.pl line 4.
    Global symbol "@first" requires explicit package name at so.pl line 5.
    Global symbol "$tmp" requires explicit package name at so.pl line 6.
    Global symbol "$tmp_first" requires explicit package name at so.pl line 6.
    Type of arg 1 to shift must be array (not scalar dereference) at so.pl line 6, near "$tmp_first)"
    Global symbol "@second" requires explicit package name at so.pl line 8.
    Global symbol "@second" requires explicit package name at so.pl line 10.
    Global symbol "$tmp" requires explicit package name at so.pl line 11.
    Global symbol "$tmp_second" requires explicit package name at so.pl line 11.
    Type of arg 1 to shift must be array (not scalar dereference) at so.pl line 11, near "$tmp_second)"
    Global symbol "@first" requires explicit package name at so.pl line 13.
    Execution aborted due to compilation errors.
    

    I dont know what you are trying to do, but here is your code with the proper syntax:

    use warnings;
    use strict;
    
    sub do_smth (\@\@);  # predeclaration needed since the prototyped sub
                         # is called recursively
    sub do_smth (\@\@) {
        my ($first, $second) = @_;
        my @tmp_first = @$first;
        my $tmp = shift(@tmp_first);
        if (@tmp_first > 0){
            do_smth(@tmp_first, @$second);
        }
        my @tmp_second = @$second;
        $tmp = shift(@tmp_second);
        if (@tmp_second > 0){
            do_smth(@$first, @tmp_second);
        }
    }
    
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