The redo command restarts the loop block without
evaluating the conditional again. The continue
block, if any, is not executed. If
the LABEL is omitted, the command refers to the innermost enclosing
loop. The redo EXPR
form, available starting in Perl 5.18.0, allows a
label name to be computed at run time, and is otherwise identical to redo
LABEL
. Programs that want to lie to themselves about what was just input
normally use this command:
redo cannot be used to retry a block that returns a
value such as eval {}
, sub {}
, or do {}
, and should not be used
to exit a grep or map
operation.
Note that a block by itself is semantically identical to a loop that executes once. Thus redo inside such a block will effectively turn it into a looping construct.
See also continue for an illustration of how last, next, and redo work.
Unlike most named operators, this has the same precedence as assignment.
It is also exempt from the looks-like-a-function rule, so
redo ("foo")."bar"
will cause "bar" to be part of the argument to
redo.