Scalars (Denoted by $) : Scalar « Language Basics « Perl
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Scalars (Denoted by $)
#To assign a scalar to another scalar, you simply say:
# $string1 = "This is a scalar";
# or
# $string1 = $string2;
Related examples in the same category
1. | Constant scalar | | |
2. | Convert to scalar | | |
3. | Creating a Scalar | | |
4. | Declare scalar variable to store the integer value | | |
5. | Naming Scalar Variables | | |
6. | Program to illustrate the use of scalar variables. | | |
7. | scalar value interpolation | | |
8. | Simple calculation with scalar variable | | |
9. | A scalar is a variable that holds a single value, a single string, or a number. | | |
10. | A scalar variable can reference a string value or a numeric value. | | |
11. | Assign new value to the integer scalar variable | | |
12. | Compound assignment operator with scalar variable | | |
13. | Concatenate two scalar variables with double quotes | | |
14. | $data is a scalar variable, while @data is an array | | |
15. | Initializing scalars and printing their values | | |
16. | Perl supports integers (decimal, octal, hexadecimal), floating point numbers, scientific notation, Booleans, and null. | | |
17. | Merge scalar variable into the string for output | | |
18. | If there are no quotes, then Perl has to decide whether the value is a string or a numeric value. | | |
19. | Scalar variables hold a single number or string and are preceded by a dollar sign ($). | | |
20. | Curly Braces | | |