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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T21:26:12+00:00 2026-05-10T21:26:12+00:00

In another Stack Overflow question Leon Timmermans asserted: I would advice you not to use

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In another Stack Overflow question Leon Timmermans asserted:

I would advice you not to use prototypes. They have their uses, but not for most cases and definitely not in this one.

Why might this be true (or otherwise)? I almost always supply prototypes for my Perl functions, and I’ve never before seen anyone else say anything bad about using them.

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  1. 2026-05-10T21:26:12+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 9:26 pm

    Prototypes aren’t bad if used correctly. The difficulty is that Perl’s prototypes don’t work the way people often expect them to. People with a background in other programming languages tend to expect prototypes to provide a mechanism for checking that function calls are correct: that is, that they have the right number and type of arguments. Perl’s prototypes are not well-suited for this task. It’s the misuse that’s bad. Perl’s prototypes have a singular and very different purpose:

    Prototypes allow you to define functions that behave like built-in functions.

    • Parentheses are optional.
    • Context is imposed on the arguments.

    For example, you could define a function like this:

    sub mypush(\@@) { ... } 

    and call it as

    mypush @array, 1, 2, 3; 

    without needing to write the \ to take a reference to the array.

    In a nutshell, prototypes let you create your own syntactic sugar. For example the Moose framework uses them to emulate a more typical OO syntax.

    This is very useful but prototypes are very limited:

    • They have to be visible at compile-time.
    • They can be bypassed.
    • Propagating context to arguments can cause unexpected behavior.
    • They can make it difficult to call functions using anything other than the strictly prescribed form.

    See Prototypes in perlsub for all the gory details.

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