Raku highlighting| docs.raku.org
Raku highlighting| docs.raku.org
Raku highlighting| docs.raku.org
Raku highlighting| docs.raku.org
Raku highlighting| docs.raku.org
Signatures appear inside parentheses after subroutine and method names, on blocks after a -> or <-> arrow, as the input to variable declarators like my, or as a separate term starting with a colon.| docs.raku.org
Raku highlighting| docs.raku.org
Raku highlighting| docs.raku.org
Raku highlighting| docs.raku.org
Raku highlighting| docs.raku.org
Raku highlighting| docs.raku.org
Raku highlighting| docs.raku.org
Raku borrows many concepts from human language. Which is not surprising, considering it was designed by a linguist.| docs.raku.org
This section explains how raw data, variables and containers relate to each other in Raku. The different types of containers used in Raku are explained and the actions applicable to them like assigning, binding and flattening. More advanced topics like self-referential data, type constraints and custom containers are discussed at the end.| docs.raku.org
Raku highlighting| docs.raku.org
Raku highlighting| docs.raku.org
Command line interface - an overview§| docs.raku.org
Raku highlighting| docs.raku.org
Raku highlighting| docs.raku.org
Raku highlighting| docs.raku.org
Raku highlighting| docs.raku.org
Raku highlighting| docs.raku.org
In role Buf§| docs.raku.org
Routines are one of the means Raku has to reuse code. They come in several forms, most notably Methods, which belong in classes and roles and are associated with an object; and functions (also called subroutines or Subs, for short), which can be called independently of objects.| docs.raku.org
Statements§| docs.raku.org
In Any§| docs.raku.org
See creating operators on how to define new operators.| docs.raku.org