multi sub *infix:<~>(ArabicStr $s1, ArabicStr $s2) {...}
multi sub *infix:<~>(Str $s1, ArabicStr $s2) {...}
multi sub *infix:<~>(ArabicStr $s1, Str $s2) {...}
could you say
multi sub *infix:<~>(ArabicStr $s1, ArabicStr | Str $s2) | (Str
$s1, ArabicStr $s2) {...}
or something to that effect?
--
Jonathan "Dataweaver" Lang
as S13 say
multi sub infix:<+> (Us $us, Them $them) is commutative {
myadd($us,$them) }
> Jonathan Lang wrote:
>
>> Instead of
>>
>> multi sub *infix:<~>(ArabicStr $s1, ArabicStr $s2) {...}
>> multi sub *infix:<~>(Str $s1, ArabicStr $s2) {...}
>> multi sub *infix:<~>(ArabicStr $s1, Str $s2) {...}
>
>
> as S13 say
>
> multi sub infix:<+> (Us $us, Them $them) is commutative {
> myadd($us,$them) }
I believe this declares that $a + $b == $b + $a, not just that you can
swap the types of the arguments. I.e. it implements
multi sub infix:<+> (Them $them, Us $us) { $us + $them }
for you. And string concatenation isn't commutative.
Miro