Because you get the instance as the first parameter, you can now access the instance-specific data. In this case, let's add a way to get at the name:
{ package Horse; @ISA = qw(Animal); sub sound { "neigh" } sub name { my $self = shift; $$self; } }
Now you call for the name:
print $tv_horse->name, " says ", $tv_horse->sound, "\n";
Inside Horse::name, the @_ array contains just $tv_horse, which the shift stores into $self. It's traditional to shift the first parameter into a variable named $self for instance methods, so stay with that unless you have strong reasons otherwise. Perl places no significance on the name $self, however.[41]
[41]If you come from another OO language background, you might choose $this or $me for the variable name, but you'll probably confuse most other Perl OO-hackers.
Then $self is dereferenced as a scalar reference, yielding Mr. Ed. The result is:
Mr. Ed says neigh.
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