In Control flow§| 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 highlighting| docs.raku.org
Raku highlighting| docs.raku.org
Raku highlighting| docs.raku.org
In role Enumeration§| 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
In List§| docs.raku.org
In IO::Path§| docs.raku.org
In Any§| 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
Raku provides a rich built-in syntax for defining and using classes. It makes writing classes expressive and short for most cases, but also provides mechanisms to cover the rare corner cases.| docs.raku.org
One often needs to refer to a specific element (or slice of elements) from a collection or data structure. Borrowing from mathematical notation where the components of a vector v would be referred to as v₁, v₂, v₃, this concept is called "subscripting" (or "indexing") in Raku.| docs.raku.org
Definition of a Raku type§| docs.raku.org
A regular expression is a sequence of characters that defines a certain text pattern, typically one that one wishes to find in some large body of text.| docs.raku.org
See creating operators on how to define new operators.| docs.raku.org