1PERLOP(1)              Perl Programmers Reference Guide              PERLOP(1)
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NAME

6       perlop - Perl operators and precedence
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DESCRIPTION

9       In Perl, the operator determines what operation is performed,
10       independent of the type of the operands.  For example "$x + $y" is
11       always a numeric addition, and if $x or $y do not contain numbers, an
12       attempt is made to convert them to numbers first.
13
14       This is in contrast to many other dynamic languages, where the
15       operation is determined by the type of the first argument.  It also
16       means that Perl has two versions of some operators, one for numeric and
17       one for string comparison.  For example "$x == $y" compares two numbers
18       for equality, and "$x eq $y" compares two strings.
19
20       There are a few exceptions though: "x" can be either string repetition
21       or list repetition, depending on the type of the left operand, and "&",
22       "|", "^" and "~" can be either string or numeric bit operations.
23
24   Operator Precedence and Associativity
25       Operator precedence and associativity work in Perl more or less like
26       they do in mathematics.
27
28       Operator precedence means some operators group more tightly than
29       others.  For example, in "2 + 4 * 5", the multiplication has higher
30       precedence, so "4 * 5" is grouped together as the right-hand operand of
31       the addition, rather than "2 + 4" being grouped together as the left-
32       hand operand of the multiplication. It is as if the expression were
33       written "2 + (4 * 5)", not "(2 + 4) * 5". So the expression yields "2 +
34       20 == 22", rather than "6 * 5 == 30".
35
36       Operator associativity defines what happens if a sequence of the same
37       operators is used one after another: usually that they will be grouped
38       at the left or the right. For example, in "9 - 3 - 2", subtraction is
39       left associative, so "9 - 3" is grouped together as the left-hand
40       operand of the second subtraction, rather than "3 - 2" being grouped
41       together as the right-hand operand of the first subtraction. It is as
42       if the expression were written "(9 - 3) - 2", not "9 - (3 - 2)". So the
43       expression yields "6 - 2 == 4", rather than "9 - 1 == 8".
44
45       For simple operators that evaluate all their operands and then combine
46       the values in some way, precedence and associativity (and parentheses)
47       imply some ordering requirements on those combining operations. For
48       example, in "2 + 4 * 5", the grouping implied by precedence means that
49       the multiplication of 4 and 5 must be performed before the addition of
50       2 and 20, simply because the result of that multiplication is required
51       as one of the operands of the addition. But the order of operations is
52       not fully determined by this: in "2 * 2 + 4 * 5" both multiplications
53       must be performed before the addition, but the grouping does not say
54       anything about the order in which the two multiplications are
55       performed. In fact Perl has a general rule that the operands of an
56       operator are evaluated in left-to-right order. A few operators such as
57       "&&=" have special evaluation rules that can result in an operand not
58       being evaluated at all; in general, the top-level operator in an
59       expression has control of operand evaluation.
60
61       Some comparison operators, as their associativity, chain with some
62       operators of the same precedence (but never with operators of different
63       precedence).  This chaining means that each comparison is performed on
64       the two arguments surrounding it, with each interior argument taking
65       part in two comparisons, and the comparison results are implicitly
66       ANDed.  Thus "$x < $y <= $z" behaves exactly like
67       "$x < $y && $y <= $z", assuming that "$y" is as simple a scalar as it
68       looks.  The ANDing short-circuits just like "&&" does, stopping the
69       sequence of comparisons as soon as one yields false.
70
71       In a chained comparison, each argument expression is evaluated at most
72       once, even if it takes part in two comparisons, but the result of the
73       evaluation is fetched for each comparison.  (It is not evaluated at all
74       if the short-circuiting means that it's not required for any
75       comparisons.)  This matters if the computation of an interior argument
76       is expensive or non-deterministic.  For example,
77
78           if($x < expensive_sub() <= $z) { ...
79
80       is not entirely like
81
82           if($x < expensive_sub() && expensive_sub() <= $z) { ...
83
84       but instead closer to
85
86           my $tmp = expensive_sub();
87           if($x < $tmp && $tmp <= $z) { ...
88
89       in that the subroutine is only called once.  However, it's not exactly
90       like this latter code either, because the chained comparison doesn't
91       actually involve any temporary variable (named or otherwise): there is
92       no assignment.  This doesn't make much difference where the expression
93       is a call to an ordinary subroutine, but matters more with an lvalue
94       subroutine, or if the argument expression yields some unusual kind of
95       scalar by other means.  For example, if the argument expression yields
96       a tied scalar, then the expression is evaluated to produce that scalar
97       at most once, but the value of that scalar may be fetched up to twice,
98       once for each comparison in which it is actually used.
99
100       In this example, the expression is evaluated only once, and the tied
101       scalar (the result of the expression) is fetched for each comparison
102       that uses it.
103
104           if ($x < $tied_scalar < $z) { ...
105
106       In the next example, the expression is evaluated only once, and the
107       tied scalar is fetched once as part of the operation within the
108       expression.  The result of that operation is fetched for each
109       comparison, which normally doesn't matter unless that expression result
110       is also magical due to operator overloading.
111
112           if ($x < $tied_scalar + 42 < $z) { ...
113
114       Some operators are instead non-associative, meaning that it is a syntax
115       error to use a sequence of those operators of the same precedence.  For
116       example, "$x .. $y .. $z" is an error.
117
118       Perl operators have the following associativity and precedence, listed
119       from highest precedence to lowest.  Operators borrowed from C keep the
120       same precedence relationship with each other, even where C's precedence
121       is slightly screwy.  (This makes learning Perl easier for C folks.)
122       With very few exceptions, these all operate on scalar values only, not
123       array values.
124
125           left        terms and list operators (leftward)
126           left        ->
127           nonassoc    ++ --
128           right       **
129           right       ! ~ ~. \ and unary + and -
130           left        =~ !~
131           left        * / % x
132           left        + - .
133           left        << >>
134           nonassoc    named unary operators
135           nonassoc    isa
136           chained     < > <= >= lt gt le ge
137           chain/na    == != eq ne <=> cmp ~~
138           left        & &.
139           left        | |. ^ ^.
140           left        &&
141           left        || //
142           nonassoc    ..  ...
143           right       ?:
144           right       = += -= *= etc. goto last next redo dump
145           left        , =>
146           nonassoc    list operators (rightward)
147           right       not
148           left        and
149           left        or xor
150
151       In the following sections, these operators are covered in detail, in
152       the same order in which they appear in the table above.
153
154       Many operators can be overloaded for objects.  See overload.
155
156   Terms and List Operators (Leftward)
157       A TERM has the highest precedence in Perl.  They include variables,
158       quote and quote-like operators, any expression in parentheses, and any
159       function whose arguments are parenthesized.  Actually, there aren't
160       really functions in this sense, just list operators and unary operators
161       behaving as functions because you put parentheses around the arguments.
162       These are all documented in perlfunc.
163
164       If any list operator ("print()", etc.) or any unary operator
165       ("chdir()", etc.)  is followed by a left parenthesis as the next token,
166       the operator and arguments within parentheses are taken to be of
167       highest precedence, just like a normal function call.
168
169       In the absence of parentheses, the precedence of list operators such as
170       "print", "sort", or "chmod" is either very high or very low depending
171       on whether you are looking at the left side or the right side of the
172       operator.  For example, in
173
174           @ary = (1, 3, sort 4, 2);
175           print @ary;         # prints 1324
176
177       the commas on the right of the "sort" are evaluated before the "sort",
178       but the commas on the left are evaluated after.  In other words, list
179       operators tend to gobble up all arguments that follow, and then act
180       like a simple TERM with regard to the preceding expression.  Be careful
181       with parentheses:
182
183           # These evaluate exit before doing the print:
184           print($foo, exit);  # Obviously not what you want.
185           print $foo, exit;   # Nor is this.
186
187           # These do the print before evaluating exit:
188           (print $foo), exit; # This is what you want.
189           print($foo), exit;  # Or this.
190           print ($foo), exit; # Or even this.
191
192       Also note that
193
194           print ($foo & 255) + 1, "\n";
195
196       probably doesn't do what you expect at first glance.  The parentheses
197       enclose the argument list for "print" which is evaluated (printing the
198       result of "$foo & 255").  Then one is added to the return value of
199       "print" (usually 1).  The result is something like this:
200
201           1 + 1, "\n";    # Obviously not what you meant.
202
203       To do what you meant properly, you must write:
204
205           print(($foo & 255) + 1, "\n");
206
207       See "Named Unary Operators" for more discussion of this.
208
209       Also parsed as terms are the "do {}" and "eval {}" constructs, as well
210       as subroutine and method calls, and the anonymous constructors "[]" and
211       "{}".
212
213       See also "Quote and Quote-like Operators" toward the end of this
214       section, as well as "I/O Operators".
215
216   The Arrow Operator
217       ""->"" is an infix dereference operator, just as it is in C and C++.
218       If the right side is either a "[...]", "{...}", or a "(...)" subscript,
219       then the left side must be either a hard or symbolic reference to an
220       array, a hash, or a subroutine respectively.  (Or technically speaking,
221       a location capable of holding a hard reference, if it's an array or
222       hash reference being used for assignment.)  See perlreftut and perlref.
223
224       Otherwise, the right side is a method name or a simple scalar variable
225       containing either the method name or a subroutine reference, and the
226       left side must be either an object (a blessed reference) or a class
227       name (that is, a package name).  See perlobj.
228
229       The dereferencing cases (as opposed to method-calling cases) are
230       somewhat extended by the "postderef" feature.  For the details of that
231       feature, consult "Postfix Dereference Syntax" in perlref.
232
233   Auto-increment and Auto-decrement
234       "++" and "--" work as in C.  That is, if placed before a variable, they
235       increment or decrement the variable by one before returning the value,
236       and if placed after, increment or decrement after returning the value.
237
238           $i = 0;  $j = 0;
239           print $i++;  # prints 0
240           print ++$j;  # prints 1
241
242       Note that just as in C, Perl doesn't define when the variable is
243       incremented or decremented.  You just know it will be done sometime
244       before or after the value is returned.  This also means that modifying
245       a variable twice in the same statement will lead to undefined behavior.
246       Avoid statements like:
247
248           $i = $i ++;
249           print ++ $i + $i ++;
250
251       Perl will not guarantee what the result of the above statements is.
252
253       The auto-increment operator has a little extra builtin magic to it.  If
254       you increment a variable that is numeric, or that has ever been used in
255       a numeric context, you get a normal increment.  If, however, the
256       variable has been used in only string contexts since it was set, and
257       has a value that is not the empty string and matches the pattern
258       "/^[a-zA-Z]*[0-9]*\z/", the increment is done as a string, preserving
259       each character within its range, with carry:
260
261           print ++($foo = "99");      # prints "100"
262           print ++($foo = "a0");      # prints "a1"
263           print ++($foo = "Az");      # prints "Ba"
264           print ++($foo = "zz");      # prints "aaa"
265
266       "undef" is always treated as numeric, and in particular is changed to 0
267       before incrementing (so that a post-increment of an undef value will
268       return 0 rather than "undef").
269
270       The auto-decrement operator is not magical.
271
272   Exponentiation
273       Binary "**" is the exponentiation operator.  It binds even more tightly
274       than unary minus, so "-2**4" is "-(2**4)", not "(-2)**4".  (This is
275       implemented using C's pow(3) function, which actually works on doubles
276       internally.)
277
278       Note that certain exponentiation expressions are ill-defined: these
279       include "0**0", "1**Inf", and "Inf**0".  Do not expect any particular
280       results from these special cases, the results are platform-dependent.
281
282   Symbolic Unary Operators
283       Unary "!" performs logical negation, that is, "not".  See also "not"
284       for a lower precedence version of this.
285
286       Unary "-" performs arithmetic negation if the operand is numeric,
287       including any string that looks like a number.  If the operand is an
288       identifier, a string consisting of a minus sign concatenated with the
289       identifier is returned.  Otherwise, if the string starts with a plus or
290       minus, a string starting with the opposite sign is returned.  One
291       effect of these rules is that "-bareword" is equivalent to the string
292       "-bareword".  If, however, the string begins with a non-alphabetic
293       character (excluding "+" or "-"), Perl will attempt to convert the
294       string to a numeric, and the arithmetic negation is performed.  If the
295       string cannot be cleanly converted to a numeric, Perl will give the
296       warning Argument "the string" isn't numeric in negation (-) at ....
297
298       Unary "~" performs bitwise negation, that is, 1's complement.  For
299       example, "0666 & ~027" is 0640.  (See also "Integer Arithmetic" and
300       "Bitwise String Operators".)  Note that the width of the result is
301       platform-dependent: "~0" is 32 bits wide on a 32-bit platform, but 64
302       bits wide on a 64-bit platform, so if you are expecting a certain bit
303       width, remember to use the "&" operator to mask off the excess bits.
304
305       Starting in Perl 5.28, it is a fatal error to try to complement a
306       string containing a character with an ordinal value above 255.
307
308       If the "bitwise" feature is enabled via "use feature 'bitwise'" or "use
309       v5.28", then unary "~" always treats its argument as a number, and an
310       alternate form of the operator, "~.", always treats its argument as a
311       string.  So "~0" and "~"0"" will both give 2**32-1 on 32-bit platforms,
312       whereas "~.0" and "~."0"" will both yield "\xff".  Until Perl 5.28,
313       this feature produced a warning in the "experimental::bitwise"
314       category.
315
316       Unary "+" has no effect whatsoever, even on strings.  It is useful
317       syntactically for separating a function name from a parenthesized
318       expression that would otherwise be interpreted as the complete list of
319       function arguments.  (See examples above under "Terms and List
320       Operators (Leftward)".)
321
322       Unary "\" creates references.  If its operand is a single sigilled
323       thing, it creates a reference to that object.  If its operand is a
324       parenthesised list, then it creates references to the things mentioned
325       in the list.  Otherwise it puts its operand in list context, and
326       creates a list of references to the scalars in the list provided by the
327       operand.  See perlreftut and perlref.  Do not confuse this behavior
328       with the behavior of backslash within a string, although both forms do
329       convey the notion of protecting the next thing from interpolation.
330
331   Binding Operators
332       Binary "=~" binds a scalar expression to a pattern match.  Certain
333       operations search or modify the string $_ by default.  This operator
334       makes that kind of operation work on some other string.  The right
335       argument is a search pattern, substitution, or transliteration.  The
336       left argument is what is supposed to be searched, substituted, or
337       transliterated instead of the default $_.  When used in scalar context,
338       the return value generally indicates the success of the operation.  The
339       exceptions are substitution ("s///") and transliteration ("y///") with
340       the "/r" (non-destructive) option, which cause the return value to be
341       the result of the substitution.  Behavior in list context depends on
342       the particular operator.  See "Regexp Quote-Like Operators" for details
343       and perlretut for examples using these operators.
344
345       If the right argument is an expression rather than a search pattern,
346       substitution, or transliteration, it is interpreted as a search pattern
347       at run time.  Note that this means that its contents will be
348       interpolated twice, so
349
350           '\\' =~ q'\\';
351
352       is not ok, as the regex engine will end up trying to compile the
353       pattern "\", which it will consider a syntax error.
354
355       Binary "!~" is just like "=~" except the return value is negated in the
356       logical sense.
357
358       Binary "!~" with a non-destructive substitution ("s///r") or
359       transliteration ("y///r") is a syntax error.
360
361   Multiplicative Operators
362       Binary "*" multiplies two numbers.
363
364       Binary "/" divides two numbers.
365
366       Binary "%" is the modulo operator, which computes the division
367       remainder of its first argument with respect to its second argument.
368       Given integer operands $m and $n: If $n is positive, then "$m % $n" is
369       $m minus the largest multiple of $n less than or equal to $m.  If $n is
370       negative, then "$m % $n" is $m minus the smallest multiple of $n that
371       is not less than $m (that is, the result will be less than or equal to
372       zero).  If the operands $m and $n are floating point values and the
373       absolute value of $n (that is "abs($n)") is less than "(UV_MAX + 1)",
374       only the integer portion of $m and $n will be used in the operation
375       (Note: here "UV_MAX" means the maximum of the unsigned integer type).
376       If the absolute value of the right operand ("abs($n)") is greater than
377       or equal to "(UV_MAX + 1)", "%" computes the floating-point remainder
378       $r in the equation "($r = $m - $i*$n)" where $i is a certain integer
379       that makes $r have the same sign as the right operand $n (not as the
380       left operand $m like C function "fmod()") and the absolute value less
381       than that of $n.  Note that when "use integer" is in scope, "%" gives
382       you direct access to the modulo operator as implemented by your C
383       compiler.  This operator is not as well defined for negative operands,
384       but it will execute faster.
385
386       Binary "x" is the repetition operator.  In scalar context, or if the
387       left operand is neither enclosed in parentheses nor a "qw//" list, it
388       performs a string repetition.  In that case it supplies scalar context
389       to the left operand, and returns a string consisting of the left
390       operand string repeated the number of times specified by the right
391       operand.  If the "x" is in list context, and the left operand is either
392       enclosed in parentheses or a "qw//" list, it performs a list
393       repetition.  In that case it supplies list context to the left operand,
394       and returns a list consisting of the left operand list repeated the
395       number of times specified by the right operand.  If the right operand
396       is zero or negative (raising a warning on negative), it returns an
397       empty string or an empty list, depending on the context.
398
399           print '-' x 80;             # print row of dashes
400
401           print "\t" x ($tab/8), ' ' x ($tab%8);      # tab over
402
403           @ones = (1) x 80;           # a list of 80 1's
404           @ones = (5) x @ones;        # set all elements to 5
405
406   Additive Operators
407       Binary "+" returns the sum of two numbers.
408
409       Binary "-" returns the difference of two numbers.
410
411       Binary "." concatenates two strings.
412
413   Shift Operators
414       Binary "<<" returns the value of its left argument shifted left by the
415       number of bits specified by the right argument.  Arguments should be
416       integers.  (See also "Integer Arithmetic".)
417
418       Binary ">>" returns the value of its left argument shifted right by the
419       number of bits specified by the right argument.  Arguments should be
420       integers.  (See also "Integer Arithmetic".)
421
422       If "use integer" (see "Integer Arithmetic") is in force then signed C
423       integers are used (arithmetic shift), otherwise unsigned C integers are
424       used (logical shift), even for negative shiftees.  In arithmetic right
425       shift the sign bit is replicated on the left, in logical shift zero
426       bits come in from the left.
427
428       Either way, the implementation isn't going to generate results larger
429       than the size of the integer type Perl was built with (32 bits or 64
430       bits).
431
432       Shifting by negative number of bits means the reverse shift: left shift
433       becomes right shift, right shift becomes left shift.  This is unlike in
434       C, where negative shift is undefined.
435
436       Shifting by more bits than the size of the integers means most of the
437       time zero (all bits fall off), except that under "use integer" right
438       overshifting a negative shiftee results in -1.  This is unlike in C,
439       where shifting by too many bits is undefined.  A common C behavior is
440       "shift by modulo wordbits", so that for example
441
442           1 >> 64 == 1 >> (64 % 64) == 1 >> 0 == 1  # Common C behavior.
443
444       but that is completely accidental.
445
446       If you get tired of being subject to your platform's native integers,
447       the "use bigint" pragma neatly sidesteps the issue altogether:
448
449           print 20 << 20;  # 20971520
450           print 20 << 40;  # 5120 on 32-bit machines,
451                            # 21990232555520 on 64-bit machines
452           use bigint;
453           print 20 << 100; # 25353012004564588029934064107520
454
455   Named Unary Operators
456       The various named unary operators are treated as functions with one
457       argument, with optional parentheses.
458
459       If any list operator ("print()", etc.) or any unary operator
460       ("chdir()", etc.)  is followed by a left parenthesis as the next token,
461       the operator and arguments within parentheses are taken to be of
462       highest precedence, just like a normal function call.  For example,
463       because named unary operators are higher precedence than "||":
464
465           chdir $foo    || die;       # (chdir $foo) || die
466           chdir($foo)   || die;       # (chdir $foo) || die
467           chdir ($foo)  || die;       # (chdir $foo) || die
468           chdir +($foo) || die;       # (chdir $foo) || die
469
470       but, because "*" is higher precedence than named operators:
471
472           chdir $foo * 20;    # chdir ($foo * 20)
473           chdir($foo) * 20;   # (chdir $foo) * 20
474           chdir ($foo) * 20;  # (chdir $foo) * 20
475           chdir +($foo) * 20; # chdir ($foo * 20)
476
477           rand 10 * 20;       # rand (10 * 20)
478           rand(10) * 20;      # (rand 10) * 20
479           rand (10) * 20;     # (rand 10) * 20
480           rand +(10) * 20;    # rand (10 * 20)
481
482       Regarding precedence, the filetest operators, like "-f", "-M", etc. are
483       treated like named unary operators, but they don't follow this
484       functional parenthesis rule.  That means, for example, that
485       "-f($file).".bak"" is equivalent to "-f "$file.bak"".
486
487       See also "Terms and List Operators (Leftward)".
488
489   Relational Operators
490       Perl operators that return true or false generally return values that
491       can be safely used as numbers.  For example, the relational operators
492       in this section and the equality operators in the next one return 1 for
493       true and a special version of the defined empty string, "", which
494       counts as a zero but is exempt from warnings about improper numeric
495       conversions, just as "0 but true" is.
496
497       Binary "<" returns true if the left argument is numerically less than
498       the right argument.
499
500       Binary ">" returns true if the left argument is numerically greater
501       than the right argument.
502
503       Binary "<=" returns true if the left argument is numerically less than
504       or equal to the right argument.
505
506       Binary ">=" returns true if the left argument is numerically greater
507       than or equal to the right argument.
508
509       Binary "lt" returns true if the left argument is stringwise less than
510       the right argument.
511
512       Binary "gt" returns true if the left argument is stringwise greater
513       than the right argument.
514
515       Binary "le" returns true if the left argument is stringwise less than
516       or equal to the right argument.
517
518       Binary "ge" returns true if the left argument is stringwise greater
519       than or equal to the right argument.
520
521       A sequence of relational operators, such as "$x < $y <= $z", performs
522       chained comparisons, in the manner described above in the section
523       "Operator Precedence and Associativity".  Beware that they do not chain
524       with equality operators, which have lower precedence.
525
526   Equality Operators
527       Binary "==" returns true if the left argument is numerically equal to
528       the right argument.
529
530       Binary "!=" returns true if the left argument is numerically not equal
531       to the right argument.
532
533       Binary "eq" returns true if the left argument is stringwise equal to
534       the right argument.
535
536       Binary "ne" returns true if the left argument is stringwise not equal
537       to the right argument.
538
539       A sequence of the above equality operators, such as "$x == $y == $z",
540       performs chained comparisons, in the manner described above in the
541       section "Operator Precedence and Associativity".  Beware that they do
542       not chain with relational operators, which have higher precedence.
543
544       Binary "<=>" returns -1, 0, or 1 depending on whether the left argument
545       is numerically less than, equal to, or greater than the right argument.
546       If your platform supports "NaN"'s (not-a-numbers) as numeric values,
547       using them with "<=>" returns undef.  "NaN" is not "<", "==", ">", "<="
548       or ">=" anything (even "NaN"), so those 5 return false.  "NaN != NaN"
549       returns true, as does "NaN !=" anything else.  If your platform doesn't
550       support "NaN"'s then "NaN" is just a string with numeric value 0.
551
552           $ perl -le '$x = "NaN"; print "No NaN support here" if $x == $x'
553           $ perl -le '$x = "NaN"; print "NaN support here" if $x != $x'
554
555       (Note that the bigint, bigrat, and bignum pragmas all support "NaN".)
556
557       Binary "cmp" returns -1, 0, or 1 depending on whether the left argument
558       is stringwise less than, equal to, or greater than the right argument.
559
560       Binary "~~" does a smartmatch between its arguments.  Smart matching is
561       described in the next section.
562
563       The two-sided ordering operators "<=>" and "cmp", and the smartmatch
564       operator "~~", are non-associative with respect to each other and with
565       respect to the equality operators of the same precedence.
566
567       "lt", "le", "ge", "gt" and "cmp" use the collation (sort) order
568       specified by the current "LC_COLLATE" locale if a "use locale" form
569       that includes collation is in effect.  See perllocale.  Do not mix
570       these with Unicode, only use them with legacy 8-bit locale encodings.
571       The standard "Unicode::Collate" and "Unicode::Collate::Locale" modules
572       offer much more powerful solutions to collation issues.
573
574       For case-insensitive comparisons, look at the "fc" in perlfunc case-
575       folding function, available in Perl v5.16 or later:
576
577           if ( fc($x) eq fc($y) ) { ... }
578
579   Class Instance Operator
580       Binary "isa" evaluates to true when the left argument is an object
581       instance of the class (or a subclass derived from that class) given by
582       the right argument.  If the left argument is not defined, not a blessed
583       object instance, nor does not derive from the class given by the right
584       argument, the operator evaluates as false. The right argument may give
585       the class either as a bareword or a scalar expression that yields a
586       string class name:
587
588           if( $obj isa Some::Class ) { ... }
589
590           if( $obj isa "Different::Class" ) { ... }
591           if( $obj isa $name_of_class ) { ... }
592
593       This is an experimental feature and is available from Perl 5.31.6 when
594       enabled by "use feature 'isa'". It emits a warning in the
595       "experimental::isa" category.
596
597   Smartmatch Operator
598       First available in Perl 5.10.1 (the 5.10.0 version behaved
599       differently), binary "~~" does a "smartmatch" between its arguments.
600       This is mostly used implicitly in the "when" construct described in
601       perlsyn, although not all "when" clauses call the smartmatch operator.
602       Unique among all of Perl's operators, the smartmatch operator can
603       recurse.  The smartmatch operator is experimental and its behavior is
604       subject to change.
605
606       It is also unique in that all other Perl operators impose a context
607       (usually string or numeric context) on their operands, autoconverting
608       those operands to those imposed contexts.  In contrast, smartmatch
609       infers contexts from the actual types of its operands and uses that
610       type information to select a suitable comparison mechanism.
611
612       The "~~" operator compares its operands "polymorphically", determining
613       how to compare them according to their actual types (numeric, string,
614       array, hash, etc.).  Like the equality operators with which it shares
615       the same precedence, "~~" returns 1 for true and "" for false.  It is
616       often best read aloud as "in", "inside of", or "is contained in",
617       because the left operand is often looked for inside the right operand.
618       That makes the order of the operands to the smartmatch operand often
619       opposite that of the regular match operator.  In other words, the
620       "smaller" thing is usually placed in the left operand and the larger
621       one in the right.
622
623       The behavior of a smartmatch depends on what type of things its
624       arguments are, as determined by the following table.  The first row of
625       the table whose types apply determines the smartmatch behavior.
626       Because what actually happens is mostly determined by the type of the
627       second operand, the table is sorted on the right operand instead of on
628       the left.
629
630        Left      Right      Description and pseudocode
631        ===============================================================
632        Any       undef      check whether Any is undefined
633                       like: !defined Any
634
635        Any       Object     invoke ~~ overloading on Object, or die
636
637        Right operand is an ARRAY:
638
639        Left      Right      Description and pseudocode
640        ===============================================================
641        ARRAY1    ARRAY2     recurse on paired elements of ARRAY1 and ARRAY2[2]
642                       like: (ARRAY1[0] ~~ ARRAY2[0])
643                               && (ARRAY1[1] ~~ ARRAY2[1]) && ...
644        HASH      ARRAY      any ARRAY elements exist as HASH keys
645                       like: grep { exists HASH->{$_} } ARRAY
646        Regexp    ARRAY      any ARRAY elements pattern match Regexp
647                       like: grep { /Regexp/ } ARRAY
648        undef     ARRAY      undef in ARRAY
649                       like: grep { !defined } ARRAY
650        Any       ARRAY      smartmatch each ARRAY element[3]
651                       like: grep { Any ~~ $_ } ARRAY
652
653        Right operand is a HASH:
654
655        Left      Right      Description and pseudocode
656        ===============================================================
657        HASH1     HASH2      all same keys in both HASHes
658                       like: keys HASH1 ==
659                                grep { exists HASH2->{$_} } keys HASH1
660        ARRAY     HASH       any ARRAY elements exist as HASH keys
661                       like: grep { exists HASH->{$_} } ARRAY
662        Regexp    HASH       any HASH keys pattern match Regexp
663                       like: grep { /Regexp/ } keys HASH
664        undef     HASH       always false (undef can't be a key)
665                       like: 0 == 1
666        Any       HASH       HASH key existence
667                       like: exists HASH->{Any}
668
669        Right operand is CODE:
670
671        Left      Right      Description and pseudocode
672        ===============================================================
673        ARRAY     CODE       sub returns true on all ARRAY elements[1]
674                       like: !grep { !CODE->($_) } ARRAY
675        HASH      CODE       sub returns true on all HASH keys[1]
676                       like: !grep { !CODE->($_) } keys HASH
677        Any       CODE       sub passed Any returns true
678                       like: CODE->(Any)
679
680       Right operand is a Regexp:
681
682        Left      Right      Description and pseudocode
683        ===============================================================
684        ARRAY     Regexp     any ARRAY elements match Regexp
685                       like: grep { /Regexp/ } ARRAY
686        HASH      Regexp     any HASH keys match Regexp
687                       like: grep { /Regexp/ } keys HASH
688        Any       Regexp     pattern match
689                       like: Any =~ /Regexp/
690
691        Other:
692
693        Left      Right      Description and pseudocode
694        ===============================================================
695        Object    Any        invoke ~~ overloading on Object,
696                             or fall back to...
697
698        Any       Num        numeric equality
699                        like: Any == Num
700        Num       nummy[4]    numeric equality
701                        like: Num == nummy
702        undef     Any        check whether undefined
703                        like: !defined(Any)
704        Any       Any        string equality
705                        like: Any eq Any
706
707       Notes:
708
709       1. Empty hashes or arrays match.
710       2. That is, each element smartmatches the element of the same index in
711       the other array.[3]
712       3. If a circular reference is found, fall back to referential equality.
713       4. Either an actual number, or a string that looks like one.
714
715       The smartmatch implicitly dereferences any non-blessed hash or array
716       reference, so the "HASH" and "ARRAY" entries apply in those cases.  For
717       blessed references, the "Object" entries apply.  Smartmatches involving
718       hashes only consider hash keys, never hash values.
719
720       The "like" code entry is not always an exact rendition.  For example,
721       the smartmatch operator short-circuits whenever possible, but "grep"
722       does not.  Also, "grep" in scalar context returns the number of
723       matches, but "~~" returns only true or false.
724
725       Unlike most operators, the smartmatch operator knows to treat "undef"
726       specially:
727
728           use v5.10.1;
729           @array = (1, 2, 3, undef, 4, 5);
730           say "some elements undefined" if undef ~~ @array;
731
732       Each operand is considered in a modified scalar context, the
733       modification being that array and hash variables are passed by
734       reference to the operator, which implicitly dereferences them.  Both
735       elements of each pair are the same:
736
737           use v5.10.1;
738
739           my %hash = (red    => 1, blue   => 2, green  => 3,
740                       orange => 4, yellow => 5, purple => 6,
741                       black  => 7, grey   => 8, white  => 9);
742
743           my @array = qw(red blue green);
744
745           say "some array elements in hash keys" if  @array ~~  %hash;
746           say "some array elements in hash keys" if \@array ~~ \%hash;
747
748           say "red in array" if "red" ~~  @array;
749           say "red in array" if "red" ~~ \@array;
750
751           say "some keys end in e" if /e$/ ~~  %hash;
752           say "some keys end in e" if /e$/ ~~ \%hash;
753
754       Two arrays smartmatch if each element in the first array smartmatches
755       (that is, is "in") the corresponding element in the second array,
756       recursively.
757
758           use v5.10.1;
759           my @little = qw(red blue green);
760           my @bigger = ("red", "blue", [ "orange", "green" ] );
761           if (@little ~~ @bigger) {  # true!
762               say "little is contained in bigger";
763           }
764
765       Because the smartmatch operator recurses on nested arrays, this will
766       still report that "red" is in the array.
767
768           use v5.10.1;
769           my @array = qw(red blue green);
770           my $nested_array = [[[[[[[ @array ]]]]]]];
771           say "red in array" if "red" ~~ $nested_array;
772
773       If two arrays smartmatch each other, then they are deep copies of each
774       others' values, as this example reports:
775
776           use v5.12.0;
777           my @a = (0, 1, 2, [3, [4, 5], 6], 7);
778           my @b = (0, 1, 2, [3, [4, 5], 6], 7);
779
780           if (@a ~~ @b && @b ~~ @a) {
781               say "a and b are deep copies of each other";
782           }
783           elsif (@a ~~ @b) {
784               say "a smartmatches in b";
785           }
786           elsif (@b ~~ @a) {
787               say "b smartmatches in a";
788           }
789           else {
790               say "a and b don't smartmatch each other at all";
791           }
792
793       If you were to set "$b[3] = 4", then instead of reporting that "a and b
794       are deep copies of each other", it now reports that "b smartmatches in
795       a".  That's because the corresponding position in @a contains an array
796       that (eventually) has a 4 in it.
797
798       Smartmatching one hash against another reports whether both contain the
799       same keys, no more and no less.  This could be used to see whether two
800       records have the same field names, without caring what values those
801       fields might have.  For example:
802
803           use v5.10.1;
804           sub make_dogtag {
805               state $REQUIRED_FIELDS = { name=>1, rank=>1, serial_num=>1 };
806
807               my ($class, $init_fields) = @_;
808
809               die "Must supply (only) name, rank, and serial number"
810                   unless $init_fields ~~ $REQUIRED_FIELDS;
811
812               ...
813           }
814
815       However, this only does what you mean if $init_fields is indeed a hash
816       reference. The condition "$init_fields ~~ $REQUIRED_FIELDS" also allows
817       the strings "name", "rank", "serial_num" as well as any array reference
818       that contains "name" or "rank" or "serial_num" anywhere to pass
819       through.
820
821       The smartmatch operator is most often used as the implicit operator of
822       a "when" clause.  See the section on "Switch Statements" in perlsyn.
823
824       Smartmatching of Objects
825
826       To avoid relying on an object's underlying representation, if the
827       smartmatch's right operand is an object that doesn't overload "~~", it
828       raises the exception ""Smartmatching a non-overloaded object breaks
829       encapsulation"".  That's because one has no business digging around to
830       see whether something is "in" an object.  These are all illegal on
831       objects without a "~~" overload:
832
833           %hash ~~ $object
834              42 ~~ $object
835          "fred" ~~ $object
836
837       However, you can change the way an object is smartmatched by
838       overloading the "~~" operator.  This is allowed to extend the usual
839       smartmatch semantics.  For objects that do have an "~~" overload, see
840       overload.
841
842       Using an object as the left operand is allowed, although not very
843       useful.  Smartmatching rules take precedence over overloading, so even
844       if the object in the left operand has smartmatch overloading, this will
845       be ignored.  A left operand that is a non-overloaded object falls back
846       on a string or numeric comparison of whatever the "ref" operator
847       returns.  That means that
848
849           $object ~~ X
850
851       does not invoke the overload method with "X" as an argument.  Instead
852       the above table is consulted as normal, and based on the type of "X",
853       overloading may or may not be invoked.  For simple strings or numbers,
854       "in" becomes equivalent to this:
855
856           $object ~~ $number          ref($object) == $number
857           $object ~~ $string          ref($object) eq $string
858
859       For example, this reports that the handle smells IOish (but please
860       don't really do this!):
861
862           use IO::Handle;
863           my $fh = IO::Handle->new();
864           if ($fh ~~ /\bIO\b/) {
865               say "handle smells IOish";
866           }
867
868       That's because it treats $fh as a string like
869       "IO::Handle=GLOB(0x8039e0)", then pattern matches against that.
870
871   Bitwise And
872       Binary "&" returns its operands ANDed together bit by bit.  Although no
873       warning is currently raised, the result is not well defined when this
874       operation is performed on operands that aren't either numbers (see
875       "Integer Arithmetic") nor bitstrings (see "Bitwise String Operators").
876
877       Note that "&" has lower priority than relational operators, so for
878       example the parentheses are essential in a test like
879
880           print "Even\n" if ($x & 1) == 0;
881
882       If the "bitwise" feature is enabled via "use feature 'bitwise'" or "use
883       v5.28", then this operator always treats its operands as numbers.
884       Before Perl 5.28 this feature produced a warning in the
885       "experimental::bitwise" category.
886
887   Bitwise Or and Exclusive Or
888       Binary "|" returns its operands ORed together bit by bit.
889
890       Binary "^" returns its operands XORed together bit by bit.
891
892       Although no warning is currently raised, the results are not well
893       defined when these operations are performed on operands that aren't
894       either numbers (see "Integer Arithmetic") nor bitstrings (see "Bitwise
895       String Operators").
896
897       Note that "|" and "^" have lower priority than relational operators, so
898       for example the parentheses are essential in a test like
899
900           print "false\n" if (8 | 2) != 10;
901
902       If the "bitwise" feature is enabled via "use feature 'bitwise'" or "use
903       v5.28", then this operator always treats its operands as numbers.
904       Before Perl 5.28. this feature produced a warning in the
905       "experimental::bitwise" category.
906
907   C-style Logical And
908       Binary "&&" performs a short-circuit logical AND operation.  That is,
909       if the left operand is false, the right operand is not even evaluated.
910       Scalar or list context propagates down to the right operand if it is
911       evaluated.
912
913   C-style Logical Or
914       Binary "||" performs a short-circuit logical OR operation.  That is, if
915       the left operand is true, the right operand is not even evaluated.
916       Scalar or list context propagates down to the right operand if it is
917       evaluated.
918
919   Logical Defined-Or
920       Although it has no direct equivalent in C, Perl's "//" operator is
921       related to its C-style "or".  In fact, it's exactly the same as "||",
922       except that it tests the left hand side's definedness instead of its
923       truth.  Thus, "EXPR1 // EXPR2" returns the value of "EXPR1" if it's
924       defined, otherwise, the value of "EXPR2" is returned.  ("EXPR1" is
925       evaluated in scalar context, "EXPR2" in the context of "//" itself).
926       Usually, this is the same result as "defined(EXPR1) ? EXPR1 : EXPR2"
927       (except that the ternary-operator form can be used as a lvalue, while
928       "EXPR1 // EXPR2" cannot).  This is very useful for providing default
929       values for variables.  If you actually want to test if at least one of
930       $x and $y is defined, use "defined($x // $y)".
931
932       The "||", "//" and "&&" operators return the last value evaluated
933       (unlike C's "||" and "&&", which return 0 or 1).  Thus, a reasonably
934       portable way to find out the home directory might be:
935
936           $home =  $ENV{HOME}
937                 // $ENV{LOGDIR}
938                 // (getpwuid($<))[7]
939                 // die "You're homeless!\n";
940
941       In particular, this means that you shouldn't use this for selecting
942       between two aggregates for assignment:
943
944           @a = @b || @c;            # This doesn't do the right thing
945           @a = scalar(@b) || @c;    # because it really means this.
946           @a = @b ? @b : @c;        # This works fine, though.
947
948       As alternatives to "&&" and "||" when used for control flow, Perl
949       provides the "and" and "or" operators (see below).  The short-circuit
950       behavior is identical.  The precedence of "and" and "or" is much lower,
951       however, so that you can safely use them after a list operator without
952       the need for parentheses:
953
954           unlink "alpha", "beta", "gamma"
955                   or gripe(), next LINE;
956
957       With the C-style operators that would have been written like this:
958
959           unlink("alpha", "beta", "gamma")
960                   || (gripe(), next LINE);
961
962       It would be even more readable to write that this way:
963
964           unless(unlink("alpha", "beta", "gamma")) {
965               gripe();
966               next LINE;
967           }
968
969       Using "or" for assignment is unlikely to do what you want; see below.
970
971   Range Operators
972       Binary ".." is the range operator, which is really two different
973       operators depending on the context.  In list context, it returns a list
974       of values counting (up by ones) from the left value to the right value.
975       If the left value is greater than the right value then it returns the
976       empty list.  The range operator is useful for writing "foreach (1..10)"
977       loops and for doing slice operations on arrays.  In the current
978       implementation, no temporary array is created when the range operator
979       is used as the expression in "foreach" loops, but older versions of
980       Perl might burn a lot of memory when you write something like this:
981
982           for (1 .. 1_000_000) {
983               # code
984           }
985
986       The range operator also works on strings, using the magical auto-
987       increment, see below.
988
989       In scalar context, ".." returns a boolean value.  The operator is
990       bistable, like a flip-flop, and emulates the line-range (comma)
991       operator of sed, awk, and various editors.  Each ".." operator
992       maintains its own boolean state, even across calls to a subroutine that
993       contains it.  It is false as long as its left operand is false.  Once
994       the left operand is true, the range operator stays true until the right
995       operand is true, AFTER which the range operator becomes false again.
996       It doesn't become false till the next time the range operator is
997       evaluated.  It can test the right operand and become false on the same
998       evaluation it became true (as in awk), but it still returns true once.
999       If you don't want it to test the right operand until the next
1000       evaluation, as in sed, just use three dots ("...") instead of two.  In
1001       all other regards, "..." behaves just like ".." does.
1002
1003       The right operand is not evaluated while the operator is in the "false"
1004       state, and the left operand is not evaluated while the operator is in
1005       the "true" state.  The precedence is a little lower than || and &&.
1006       The value returned is either the empty string for false, or a sequence
1007       number (beginning with 1) for true.  The sequence number is reset for
1008       each range encountered.  The final sequence number in a range has the
1009       string "E0" appended to it, which doesn't affect its numeric value, but
1010       gives you something to search for if you want to exclude the endpoint.
1011       You can exclude the beginning point by waiting for the sequence number
1012       to be greater than 1.
1013
1014       If either operand of scalar ".." is a constant expression, that operand
1015       is considered true if it is equal ("==") to the current input line
1016       number (the $. variable).
1017
1018       To be pedantic, the comparison is actually "int(EXPR) == int(EXPR)",
1019       but that is only an issue if you use a floating point expression; when
1020       implicitly using $. as described in the previous paragraph, the
1021       comparison is "int(EXPR) == int($.)" which is only an issue when $.  is
1022       set to a floating point value and you are not reading from a file.
1023       Furthermore, "span" .. "spat" or "2.18 .. 3.14" will not do what you
1024       want in scalar context because each of the operands are evaluated using
1025       their integer representation.
1026
1027       Examples:
1028
1029       As a scalar operator:
1030
1031           if (101 .. 200) { print; } # print 2nd hundred lines, short for
1032                                      #  if ($. == 101 .. $. == 200) { print; }
1033
1034           next LINE if (1 .. /^$/);  # skip header lines, short for
1035                                      #   next LINE if ($. == 1 .. /^$/);
1036                                      # (typically in a loop labeled LINE)
1037
1038           s/^/> / if (/^$/ .. eof());  # quote body
1039
1040           # parse mail messages
1041           while (<>) {
1042               $in_header =   1  .. /^$/;
1043               $in_body   = /^$/ .. eof;
1044               if ($in_header) {
1045                   # do something
1046               } else { # in body
1047                   # do something else
1048               }
1049           } continue {
1050               close ARGV if eof;             # reset $. each file
1051           }
1052
1053       Here's a simple example to illustrate the difference between the two
1054       range operators:
1055
1056           @lines = ("   - Foo",
1057                     "01 - Bar",
1058                     "1  - Baz",
1059                     "   - Quux");
1060
1061           foreach (@lines) {
1062               if (/0/ .. /1/) {
1063                   print "$_\n";
1064               }
1065           }
1066
1067       This program will print only the line containing "Bar".  If the range
1068       operator is changed to "...", it will also print the "Baz" line.
1069
1070       And now some examples as a list operator:
1071
1072           for (101 .. 200) { print }      # print $_ 100 times
1073           @foo = @foo[0 .. $#foo];        # an expensive no-op
1074           @foo = @foo[$#foo-4 .. $#foo];  # slice last 5 items
1075
1076       Because each operand is evaluated in integer form, "2.18 .. 3.14" will
1077       return two elements in list context.
1078
1079           @list = (2.18 .. 3.14); # same as @list = (2 .. 3);
1080
1081       The range operator in list context can make use of the magical auto-
1082       increment algorithm if both operands are strings, subject to the
1083       following rules:
1084
1085       •   With one exception (below), if both strings look like numbers to
1086           Perl, the magic increment will not be applied, and the strings will
1087           be treated as numbers (more specifically, integers) instead.
1088
1089           For example, "-2".."2" is the same as "-2..2", and "2.18".."3.14"
1090           produces "2, 3".
1091
1092       •   The exception to the above rule is when the left-hand string begins
1093           with 0 and is longer than one character, in this case the magic
1094           increment will be applied, even though strings like "01" would
1095           normally look like a number to Perl.
1096
1097           For example, "01".."04" produces "01", "02", "03", "04", and
1098           "00".."-1" produces "00" through "99" - this may seem surprising,
1099           but see the following rules for why it works this way.  To get
1100           dates with leading zeros, you can say:
1101
1102               @z2 = ("01" .. "31");
1103               print $z2[$mday];
1104
1105           If you want to force strings to be interpreted as numbers, you
1106           could say
1107
1108               @numbers = ( 0+$first .. 0+$last );
1109
1110           Note: In Perl versions 5.30 and below, any string on the left-hand
1111           side beginning with "0", including the string "0" itself, would
1112           cause the magic string increment behavior. This means that on these
1113           Perl versions, "0".."-1" would produce "0" through "99", which was
1114           inconsistent with "0..-1", which produces the empty list. This also
1115           means that "0".."9" now produces a list of integers instead of a
1116           list of strings.
1117
1118       •   If the initial value specified isn't part of a magical increment
1119           sequence (that is, a non-empty string matching
1120           "/^[a-zA-Z]*[0-9]*\z/"), only the initial value will be returned.
1121
1122           For example, "ax".."az" produces "ax", "ay", "az", but "*x".."az"
1123           produces only "*x".
1124
1125       •   For other initial values that are strings that do follow the rules
1126           of the magical increment, the corresponding sequence will be
1127           returned.
1128
1129           For example, you can say
1130
1131               @alphabet = ("A" .. "Z");
1132
1133           to get all normal letters of the English alphabet, or
1134
1135               $hexdigit = (0 .. 9, "a" .. "f")[$num & 15];
1136
1137           to get a hexadecimal digit.
1138
1139       •   If the final value specified is not in the sequence that the
1140           magical increment would produce, the sequence goes until the next
1141           value would be longer than the final value specified. If the length
1142           of the final string is shorter than the first, the empty list is
1143           returned.
1144
1145           For example, "a".."--" is the same as "a".."zz", "0".."xx" produces
1146           "0" through "99", and "aaa".."--" returns the empty list.
1147
1148       As of Perl 5.26, the list-context range operator on strings works as
1149       expected in the scope of "use feature 'unicode_strings". In previous
1150       versions, and outside the scope of that feature, it exhibits "The
1151       "Unicode Bug"" in perlunicode: its behavior depends on the internal
1152       encoding of the range endpoint.
1153
1154       Because the magical increment only works on non-empty strings matching
1155       "/^[a-zA-Z]*[0-9]*\z/", the following will only return an alpha:
1156
1157           use charnames "greek";
1158           my @greek_small =  ("\N{alpha}" .. "\N{omega}");
1159
1160       To get the 25 traditional lowercase Greek letters, including both
1161       sigmas, you could use this instead:
1162
1163           use charnames "greek";
1164           my @greek_small =  map { chr } ( ord("\N{alpha}")
1165                                               ..
1166                                            ord("\N{omega}")
1167                                          );
1168
1169       However, because there are many other lowercase Greek characters than
1170       just those, to match lowercase Greek characters in a regular
1171       expression, you could use the pattern "/(?:(?=\p{Greek})\p{Lower})+/"
1172       (or the experimental feature "/(?[ \p{Greek} & \p{Lower} ])+/").
1173
1174   Conditional Operator
1175       Ternary "?:" is the conditional operator, just as in C.  It works much
1176       like an if-then-else.  If the argument before the "?" is true, the
1177       argument before the ":" is returned, otherwise the argument after the
1178       ":" is returned.  For example:
1179
1180           printf "I have %d dog%s.\n", $n,
1181                   ($n == 1) ? "" : "s";
1182
1183       Scalar or list context propagates downward into the 2nd or 3rd
1184       argument, whichever is selected.
1185
1186           $x = $ok ? $y : $z;  # get a scalar
1187           @x = $ok ? @y : @z;  # get an array
1188           $x = $ok ? @y : @z;  # oops, that's just a count!
1189
1190       The operator may be assigned to if both the 2nd and 3rd arguments are
1191       legal lvalues (meaning that you can assign to them):
1192
1193           ($x_or_y ? $x : $y) = $z;
1194
1195       Because this operator produces an assignable result, using assignments
1196       without parentheses will get you in trouble.  For example, this:
1197
1198           $x % 2 ? $x += 10 : $x += 2
1199
1200       Really means this:
1201
1202           (($x % 2) ? ($x += 10) : $x) += 2
1203
1204       Rather than this:
1205
1206           ($x % 2) ? ($x += 10) : ($x += 2)
1207
1208       That should probably be written more simply as:
1209
1210           $x += ($x % 2) ? 10 : 2;
1211
1212   Assignment Operators
1213       "=" is the ordinary assignment operator.
1214
1215       Assignment operators work as in C.  That is,
1216
1217           $x += 2;
1218
1219       is equivalent to
1220
1221           $x = $x + 2;
1222
1223       although without duplicating any side effects that dereferencing the
1224       lvalue might trigger, such as from "tie()".  Other assignment operators
1225       work similarly.  The following are recognized:
1226
1227           **=    +=    *=    &=    &.=    <<=    &&=
1228                  -=    /=    |=    |.=    >>=    ||=
1229                  .=    %=    ^=    ^.=           //=
1230                        x=
1231
1232       Although these are grouped by family, they all have the precedence of
1233       assignment.  These combined assignment operators can only operate on
1234       scalars, whereas the ordinary assignment operator can assign to arrays,
1235       hashes, lists and even references.  (See "Context" and "List value
1236       constructors" in perldata, and "Assigning to References" in perlref.)
1237
1238       Unlike in C, the scalar assignment operator produces a valid lvalue.
1239       Modifying an assignment is equivalent to doing the assignment and then
1240       modifying the variable that was assigned to.  This is useful for
1241       modifying a copy of something, like this:
1242
1243           ($tmp = $global) =~ tr/13579/24680/;
1244
1245       Although as of 5.14, that can be also be accomplished this way:
1246
1247           use v5.14;
1248           $tmp = ($global =~  tr/13579/24680/r);
1249
1250       Likewise,
1251
1252           ($x += 2) *= 3;
1253
1254       is equivalent to
1255
1256           $x += 2;
1257           $x *= 3;
1258
1259       Similarly, a list assignment in list context produces the list of
1260       lvalues assigned to, and a list assignment in scalar context returns
1261       the number of elements produced by the expression on the right hand
1262       side of the assignment.
1263
1264       The three dotted bitwise assignment operators ("&.=" "|.=" "^.=") are
1265       new in Perl 5.22.  See "Bitwise String Operators".
1266
1267   Comma Operator
1268       Binary "," is the comma operator.  In scalar context it evaluates its
1269       left argument, throws that value away, then evaluates its right
1270       argument and returns that value.  This is just like C's comma operator.
1271
1272       In list context, it's just the list argument separator, and inserts
1273       both its arguments into the list.  These arguments are also evaluated
1274       from left to right.
1275
1276       The "=>" operator (sometimes pronounced "fat comma") is a synonym for
1277       the comma except that it causes a word on its left to be interpreted as
1278       a string if it begins with a letter or underscore and is composed only
1279       of letters, digits and underscores.  This includes operands that might
1280       otherwise be interpreted as operators, constants, single number
1281       v-strings or function calls.  If in doubt about this behavior, the left
1282       operand can be quoted explicitly.
1283
1284       Otherwise, the "=>" operator behaves exactly as the comma operator or
1285       list argument separator, according to context.
1286
1287       For example:
1288
1289           use constant FOO => "something";
1290
1291           my %h = ( FOO => 23 );
1292
1293       is equivalent to:
1294
1295           my %h = ("FOO", 23);
1296
1297       It is NOT:
1298
1299           my %h = ("something", 23);
1300
1301       The "=>" operator is helpful in documenting the correspondence between
1302       keys and values in hashes, and other paired elements in lists.
1303
1304           %hash = ( $key => $value );
1305           login( $username => $password );
1306
1307       The special quoting behavior ignores precedence, and hence may apply to
1308       part of the left operand:
1309
1310           print time.shift => "bbb";
1311
1312       That example prints something like "1314363215shiftbbb", because the
1313       "=>" implicitly quotes the "shift" immediately on its left, ignoring
1314       the fact that "time.shift" is the entire left operand.
1315
1316   List Operators (Rightward)
1317       On the right side of a list operator, the comma has very low
1318       precedence, such that it controls all comma-separated expressions found
1319       there.  The only operators with lower precedence are the logical
1320       operators "and", "or", and "not", which may be used to evaluate calls
1321       to list operators without the need for parentheses:
1322
1323           open HANDLE, "< :encoding(UTF-8)", "filename"
1324               or die "Can't open: $!\n";
1325
1326       However, some people find that code harder to read than writing it with
1327       parentheses:
1328
1329           open(HANDLE, "< :encoding(UTF-8)", "filename")
1330               or die "Can't open: $!\n";
1331
1332       in which case you might as well just use the more customary "||"
1333       operator:
1334
1335           open(HANDLE, "< :encoding(UTF-8)", "filename")
1336               || die "Can't open: $!\n";
1337
1338       See also discussion of list operators in "Terms and List Operators
1339       (Leftward)".
1340
1341   Logical Not
1342       Unary "not" returns the logical negation of the expression to its
1343       right.  It's the equivalent of "!" except for the very low precedence.
1344
1345   Logical And
1346       Binary "and" returns the logical conjunction of the two surrounding
1347       expressions.  It's equivalent to "&&" except for the very low
1348       precedence.  This means that it short-circuits: the right expression is
1349       evaluated only if the left expression is true.
1350
1351   Logical or and Exclusive Or
1352       Binary "or" returns the logical disjunction of the two surrounding
1353       expressions.  It's equivalent to "||" except for the very low
1354       precedence.  This makes it useful for control flow:
1355
1356           print FH $data              or die "Can't write to FH: $!";
1357
1358       This means that it short-circuits: the right expression is evaluated
1359       only if the left expression is false.  Due to its precedence, you must
1360       be careful to avoid using it as replacement for the "||" operator.  It
1361       usually works out better for flow control than in assignments:
1362
1363           $x = $y or $z;              # bug: this is wrong
1364           ($x = $y) or $z;            # really means this
1365           $x = $y || $z;              # better written this way
1366
1367       However, when it's a list-context assignment and you're trying to use
1368       "||" for control flow, you probably need "or" so that the assignment
1369       takes higher precedence.
1370
1371           @info = stat($file) || die;     # oops, scalar sense of stat!
1372           @info = stat($file) or die;     # better, now @info gets its due
1373
1374       Then again, you could always use parentheses.
1375
1376       Binary "xor" returns the exclusive-OR of the two surrounding
1377       expressions.  It cannot short-circuit (of course).
1378
1379       There is no low precedence operator for defined-OR.
1380
1381   C Operators Missing From Perl
1382       Here is what C has that Perl doesn't:
1383
1384       unary & Address-of operator.  (But see the "\" operator for taking a
1385               reference.)
1386
1387       unary * Dereference-address operator.  (Perl's prefix dereferencing
1388               operators are typed: "$", "@", "%", and "&".)
1389
1390       (TYPE)  Type-casting operator.
1391
1392   Quote and Quote-like Operators
1393       While we usually think of quotes as literal values, in Perl they
1394       function as operators, providing various kinds of interpolating and
1395       pattern matching capabilities.  Perl provides customary quote
1396       characters for these behaviors, but also provides a way for you to
1397       choose your quote character for any of them.  In the following table, a
1398       "{}" represents any pair of delimiters you choose.
1399
1400           Customary  Generic        Meaning        Interpolates
1401               ''       q{}          Literal             no
1402               ""      qq{}          Literal             yes
1403               ``      qx{}          Command             yes*
1404                       qw{}         Word list            no
1405               //       m{}       Pattern match          yes*
1406                       qr{}          Pattern             yes*
1407                        s{}{}      Substitution          yes*
1408                       tr{}{}    Transliteration         no (but see below)
1409                        y{}{}    Transliteration         no (but see below)
1410               <<EOF                 here-doc            yes*
1411
1412               * unless the delimiter is ''.
1413
1414       Non-bracketing delimiters use the same character fore and aft, but the
1415       four sorts of ASCII brackets (round, angle, square, curly) all nest,
1416       which means that
1417
1418           q{foo{bar}baz}
1419
1420       is the same as
1421
1422           'foo{bar}baz'
1423
1424       Note, however, that this does not always work for quoting Perl code:
1425
1426           $s = q{ if($x eq "}") ... }; # WRONG
1427
1428       is a syntax error.  The "Text::Balanced" module (standard as of v5.8,
1429       and from CPAN before then) is able to do this properly.
1430
1431       There can (and in some cases, must) be whitespace between the operator
1432       and the quoting characters, except when "#" is being used as the
1433       quoting character.  "q#foo#" is parsed as the string "foo", while
1434       "q #foo#" is the operator "q" followed by a comment.  Its argument will
1435       be taken from the next line.  This allows you to write:
1436
1437           s {foo}  # Replace foo
1438             {bar}  # with bar.
1439
1440       The cases where whitespace must be used are when the quoting character
1441       is a word character (meaning it matches "/\w/"):
1442
1443           q XfooX # Works: means the string 'foo'
1444           qXfooX  # WRONG!
1445
1446       The following escape sequences are available in constructs that
1447       interpolate, and in transliterations whose delimiters aren't single
1448       quotes ("'").  In all the ones with braces, any number of blanks and/or
1449       tabs adjoining and within the braces are allowed (and ignored).
1450
1451           Sequence     Note  Description
1452           \t                  tab               (HT, TAB)
1453           \n                  newline           (NL)
1454           \r                  return            (CR)
1455           \f                  form feed         (FF)
1456           \b                  backspace         (BS)
1457           \a                  alarm (bell)      (BEL)
1458           \e                  escape            (ESC)
1459           \x{263A}     [1,8]  hex char          (example shown: SMILEY)
1460           \x{ 263A }          Same, but shows optional blanks inside and
1461                               adjoining the braces
1462           \x1b         [2,8]  restricted range hex char (example: ESC)
1463           \N{name}     [3]    named Unicode character or character sequence
1464           \N{U+263D}   [4,8]  Unicode character (example: FIRST QUARTER MOON)
1465           \c[          [5]    control char      (example: chr(27))
1466           \o{23072}    [6,8]  octal char        (example: SMILEY)
1467           \033         [7,8]  restricted range octal char  (example: ESC)
1468
1469       Note that any escape sequence using braces inside interpolated
1470       constructs may have optional blanks (tab or space characters) adjoining
1471       with and inside of the braces, as illustrated above by the second
1472       "\x{ }" example.
1473
1474       [1] The result is the character specified by the hexadecimal number
1475           between the braces.  See "[8]" below for details on which
1476           character.
1477
1478           Blanks (tab or space characters) may separate the number from
1479           either or both of the braces.
1480
1481           Otherwise, only hexadecimal digits are valid between the braces.
1482           If an invalid character is encountered, a warning will be issued
1483           and the invalid character and all subsequent characters (valid or
1484           invalid) within the braces will be discarded.
1485
1486           If there are no valid digits between the braces, the generated
1487           character is the NULL character ("\x{00}").  However, an explicit
1488           empty brace ("\x{}") will not cause a warning (currently).
1489
1490       [2] The result is the character specified by the hexadecimal number in
1491           the range 0x00 to 0xFF.  See "[8]" below for details on which
1492           character.
1493
1494           Only hexadecimal digits are valid following "\x".  When "\x" is
1495           followed by fewer than two valid digits, any valid digits will be
1496           zero-padded.  This means that "\x7" will be interpreted as "\x07",
1497           and a lone "\x" will be interpreted as "\x00".  Except at the end
1498           of a string, having fewer than two valid digits will result in a
1499           warning.  Note that although the warning says the illegal character
1500           is ignored, it is only ignored as part of the escape and will still
1501           be used as the subsequent character in the string.  For example:
1502
1503             Original    Result    Warns?
1504             "\x7"       "\x07"    no
1505             "\x"        "\x00"    no
1506             "\x7q"      "\x07q"   yes
1507             "\xq"       "\x00q"   yes
1508
1509       [3] The result is the Unicode character or character sequence given by
1510           name.  See charnames.
1511
1512       [4] "\N{U+hexadecimal number}" means the Unicode character whose
1513           Unicode code point is hexadecimal number.
1514
1515       [5] The character following "\c" is mapped to some other character as
1516           shown in the table:
1517
1518            Sequence   Value
1519              \c@      chr(0)
1520              \cA      chr(1)
1521              \ca      chr(1)
1522              \cB      chr(2)
1523              \cb      chr(2)
1524              ...
1525              \cZ      chr(26)
1526              \cz      chr(26)
1527              \c[      chr(27)
1528                                # See below for chr(28)
1529              \c]      chr(29)
1530              \c^      chr(30)
1531              \c_      chr(31)
1532              \c?      chr(127) # (on ASCII platforms; see below for link to
1533                                #  EBCDIC discussion)
1534
1535           In other words, it's the character whose code point has had 64
1536           xor'd with its uppercase.  "\c?" is DELETE on ASCII platforms
1537           because "ord("?") ^ 64" is 127, and "\c@" is NULL because the ord
1538           of "@" is 64, so xor'ing 64 itself produces 0.
1539
1540           Also, "\c\X" yields " chr(28) . "X"" for any X, but cannot come at
1541           the end of a string, because the backslash would be parsed as
1542           escaping the end quote.
1543
1544           On ASCII platforms, the resulting characters from the list above
1545           are the complete set of ASCII controls.  This isn't the case on
1546           EBCDIC platforms; see "OPERATOR DIFFERENCES" in perlebcdic for a
1547           full discussion of the differences between these for ASCII versus
1548           EBCDIC platforms.
1549
1550           Use of any other character following the "c" besides those listed
1551           above is discouraged, and as of Perl v5.20, the only characters
1552           actually allowed are the printable ASCII ones, minus the left brace
1553           "{".  What happens for any of the allowed other characters is that
1554           the value is derived by xor'ing with the seventh bit, which is 64,
1555           and a warning raised if enabled.  Using the non-allowed characters
1556           generates a fatal error.
1557
1558           To get platform independent controls, you can use "\N{...}".
1559
1560       [6] The result is the character specified by the octal number between
1561           the braces.  See "[8]" below for details on which character.
1562
1563           Blanks (tab or space characters) may separate the number from
1564           either or both of the braces.
1565
1566           Otherwise, if a character that isn't an octal digit is encountered,
1567           a warning is raised, and the value is based on the octal digits
1568           before it, discarding it and all following characters up to the
1569           closing brace.  It is a fatal error if there are no octal digits at
1570           all.
1571
1572       [7] The result is the character specified by the three-digit octal
1573           number in the range 000 to 777 (but best to not use above 077, see
1574           next paragraph).  See "[8]" below for details on which character.
1575
1576           Some contexts allow 2 or even 1 digit, but any usage without
1577           exactly three digits, the first being a zero, may give unintended
1578           results.  (For example, in a regular expression it may be confused
1579           with a backreference; see "Octal escapes" in perlrebackslash.)
1580           Starting in Perl 5.14, you may use "\o{}" instead, which avoids all
1581           these problems.  Otherwise, it is best to use this construct only
1582           for ordinals "\077" and below, remembering to pad to the left with
1583           zeros to make three digits.  For larger ordinals, either use
1584           "\o{}", or convert to something else, such as to hex and use
1585           "\N{U+}" (which is portable between platforms with different
1586           character sets) or "\x{}" instead.
1587
1588       [8] Several constructs above specify a character by a number.  That
1589           number gives the character's position in the character set encoding
1590           (indexed from 0).  This is called synonymously its ordinal, code
1591           position, or code point.  Perl works on platforms that have a
1592           native encoding currently of either ASCII/Latin1 or EBCDIC, each of
1593           which allow specification of 256 characters.  In general, if the
1594           number is 255 (0xFF, 0377) or below, Perl interprets this in the
1595           platform's native encoding.  If the number is 256 (0x100, 0400) or
1596           above, Perl interprets it as a Unicode code point and the result is
1597           the corresponding Unicode character.  For example "\x{50}" and
1598           "\o{120}" both are the number 80 in decimal, which is less than
1599           256, so the number is interpreted in the native character set
1600           encoding.  In ASCII the character in the 80th position (indexed
1601           from 0) is the letter "P", and in EBCDIC it is the ampersand symbol
1602           "&".  "\x{100}" and "\o{400}" are both 256 in decimal, so the
1603           number is interpreted as a Unicode code point no matter what the
1604           native encoding is.  The name of the character in the 256th
1605           position (indexed by 0) in Unicode is "LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH
1606           MACRON".
1607
1608           An exception to the above rule is that "\N{U+hex number}" is always
1609           interpreted as a Unicode code point, so that "\N{U+0050}" is "P"
1610           even on EBCDIC platforms.
1611
1612       NOTE: Unlike C and other languages, Perl has no "\v" escape sequence
1613       for the vertical tab (VT, which is 11 in both ASCII and EBCDIC), but
1614       you may use "\N{VT}", "\ck", "\N{U+0b}", or "\x0b".  ("\v" does have
1615       meaning in regular expression patterns in Perl, see perlre.)
1616
1617       The following escape sequences are available in constructs that
1618       interpolate, but not in transliterations.
1619
1620           \l          lowercase next character only
1621           \u          titlecase (not uppercase!) next character only
1622           \L          lowercase all characters till \E or end of string
1623           \U          uppercase all characters till \E or end of string
1624           \F          foldcase all characters till \E or end of string
1625           \Q          quote (disable) pattern metacharacters till \E or
1626                       end of string
1627           \E          end either case modification or quoted section
1628                       (whichever was last seen)
1629
1630       See "quotemeta" in perlfunc for the exact definition of characters that
1631       are quoted by "\Q".
1632
1633       "\L", "\U", "\F", and "\Q" can stack, in which case you need one "\E"
1634       for each.  For example:
1635
1636        say"This \Qquoting \ubusiness \Uhere isn't quite\E done yet,\E is it?";
1637        This quoting\ Business\ HERE\ ISN\'T\ QUITE\ done\ yet\, is it?
1638
1639       If a "use locale" form that includes "LC_CTYPE" is in effect (see
1640       perllocale), the case map used by "\l", "\L", "\u", and "\U" is taken
1641       from the current locale.  If Unicode (for example, "\N{}" or code
1642       points of 0x100 or beyond) is being used, the case map used by "\l",
1643       "\L", "\u", and "\U" is as defined by Unicode.  That means that case-
1644       mapping a single character can sometimes produce a sequence of several
1645       characters.  Under "use locale", "\F" produces the same results as "\L"
1646       for all locales but a UTF-8 one, where it instead uses the Unicode
1647       definition.
1648
1649       All systems use the virtual "\n" to represent a line terminator, called
1650       a "newline".  There is no such thing as an unvarying, physical newline
1651       character.  It is only an illusion that the operating system, device
1652       drivers, C libraries, and Perl all conspire to preserve.  Not all
1653       systems read "\r" as ASCII CR and "\n" as ASCII LF.  For example, on
1654       the ancient Macs (pre-MacOS X) of yesteryear, these used to be
1655       reversed, and on systems without a line terminator, printing "\n" might
1656       emit no actual data.  In general, use "\n" when you mean a "newline"
1657       for your system, but use the literal ASCII when you need an exact
1658       character.  For example, most networking protocols expect and prefer a
1659       CR+LF ("\015\012" or "\cM\cJ") for line terminators, and although they
1660       often accept just "\012", they seldom tolerate just "\015".  If you get
1661       in the habit of using "\n" for networking, you may be burned some day.
1662
1663       For constructs that do interpolate, variables beginning with ""$"" or
1664       ""@"" are interpolated.  Subscripted variables such as $a[3] or
1665       "$href->{key}[0]" are also interpolated, as are array and hash slices.
1666       But method calls such as "$obj->meth" are not.
1667
1668       Interpolating an array or slice interpolates the elements in order,
1669       separated by the value of $", so is equivalent to interpolating
1670       "join $", @array".  "Punctuation" arrays such as "@*" are usually
1671       interpolated only if the name is enclosed in braces "@{*}", but the
1672       arrays @_, "@+", and "@-" are interpolated even without braces.
1673
1674       For double-quoted strings, the quoting from "\Q" is applied after
1675       interpolation and escapes are processed.
1676
1677           "abc\Qfoo\tbar$s\Exyz"
1678
1679       is equivalent to
1680
1681           "abc" . quotemeta("foo\tbar$s") . "xyz"
1682
1683       For the pattern of regex operators ("qr//", "m//" and "s///"), the
1684       quoting from "\Q" is applied after interpolation is processed, but
1685       before escapes are processed.  This allows the pattern to match
1686       literally (except for "$" and "@").  For example, the following
1687       matches:
1688
1689           '\s\t' =~ /\Q\s\t/
1690
1691       Because "$" or "@" trigger interpolation, you'll need to use something
1692       like "/\Quser\E\@\Qhost/" to match them literally.
1693
1694       Patterns are subject to an additional level of interpretation as a
1695       regular expression.  This is done as a second pass, after variables are
1696       interpolated, so that regular expressions may be incorporated into the
1697       pattern from the variables.  If this is not what you want, use "\Q" to
1698       interpolate a variable literally.
1699
1700       Apart from the behavior described above, Perl does not expand multiple
1701       levels of interpolation.  In particular, contrary to the expectations
1702       of shell programmers, back-quotes do NOT interpolate within double
1703       quotes, nor do single quotes impede evaluation of variables when used
1704       within double quotes.
1705
1706   Regexp Quote-Like Operators
1707       Here are the quote-like operators that apply to pattern matching and
1708       related activities.
1709
1710       "qr/STRING/msixpodualn"
1711               This operator quotes (and possibly compiles) its STRING as a
1712               regular expression.  STRING is interpolated the same way as
1713               PATTERN in "m/PATTERN/".  If "'" is used as the delimiter, no
1714               variable interpolation is done.  Returns a Perl value which may
1715               be used instead of the corresponding "/STRING/msixpodualn"
1716               expression.  The returned value is a normalized version of the
1717               original pattern.  It magically differs from a string
1718               containing the same characters: "ref(qr/x/)" returns "Regexp";
1719               however, dereferencing it is not well defined (you currently
1720               get the normalized version of the original pattern, but this
1721               may change).
1722
1723               For example,
1724
1725                   $rex = qr/my.STRING/is;
1726                   print $rex;                 # prints (?si-xm:my.STRING)
1727                   s/$rex/foo/;
1728
1729               is equivalent to
1730
1731                   s/my.STRING/foo/is;
1732
1733               The result may be used as a subpattern in a match:
1734
1735                   $re = qr/$pattern/;
1736                   $string =~ /foo${re}bar/;   # can be interpolated in other
1737                                               # patterns
1738                   $string =~ $re;             # or used standalone
1739                   $string =~ /$re/;           # or this way
1740
1741               Since Perl may compile the pattern at the moment of execution
1742               of the "qr()" operator, using "qr()" may have speed advantages
1743               in some situations, notably if the result of "qr()" is used
1744               standalone:
1745
1746                   sub match {
1747                       my $patterns = shift;
1748                       my @compiled = map qr/$_/i, @$patterns;
1749                       grep {
1750                           my $success = 0;
1751                           foreach my $pat (@compiled) {
1752                               $success = 1, last if /$pat/;
1753                           }
1754                           $success;
1755                       } @_;
1756                   }
1757
1758               Precompilation of the pattern into an internal representation
1759               at the moment of "qr()" avoids the need to recompile the
1760               pattern every time a match "/$pat/" is attempted.  (Perl has
1761               many other internal optimizations, but none would be triggered
1762               in the above example if we did not use "qr()" operator.)
1763
1764               Options (specified by the following modifiers) are:
1765
1766                   m   Treat string as multiple lines.
1767                   s   Treat string as single line. (Make . match a newline)
1768                   i   Do case-insensitive pattern matching.
1769                   x   Use extended regular expressions; specifying two
1770                       x's means \t and the SPACE character are ignored within
1771                       square-bracketed character classes
1772                   p   When matching preserve a copy of the matched string so
1773                       that ${^PREMATCH}, ${^MATCH}, ${^POSTMATCH} will be
1774                       defined (ignored starting in v5.20) as these are always
1775                       defined starting in that release
1776                   o   Compile pattern only once.
1777                   a   ASCII-restrict: Use ASCII for \d, \s, \w and [[:posix:]]
1778                       character classes; specifying two a's adds the further
1779                       restriction that no ASCII character will match a
1780                       non-ASCII one under /i.
1781                   l   Use the current run-time locale's rules.
1782                   u   Use Unicode rules.
1783                   d   Use Unicode or native charset, as in 5.12 and earlier.
1784                   n   Non-capture mode. Don't let () fill in $1, $2, etc...
1785
1786               If a precompiled pattern is embedded in a larger pattern then
1787               the effect of "msixpluadn" will be propagated appropriately.
1788               The effect that the "/o" modifier has is not propagated, being
1789               restricted to those patterns explicitly using it.
1790
1791               The "/a", "/d", "/l", and "/u" modifiers (added in Perl 5.14)
1792               control the character set rules, but "/a" is the only one you
1793               are likely to want to specify explicitly; the other three are
1794               selected automatically by various pragmas.
1795
1796               See perlre for additional information on valid syntax for
1797               STRING, and for a detailed look at the semantics of regular
1798               expressions.  In particular, all modifiers except the largely
1799               obsolete "/o" are further explained in "Modifiers" in perlre.
1800               "/o" is described in the next section.
1801
1802       "m/PATTERN/msixpodualngc"
1803       "/PATTERN/msixpodualngc"
1804               Searches a string for a pattern match, and in scalar context
1805               returns true if it succeeds, false if it fails.  If no string
1806               is specified via the "=~" or "!~" operator, the $_ string is
1807               searched.  (The string specified with "=~" need not be an
1808               lvalue--it may be the result of an expression evaluation, but
1809               remember the "=~" binds rather tightly.)  See also perlre.
1810
1811               Options are as described in "qr//" above; in addition, the
1812               following match process modifiers are available:
1813
1814                g  Match globally, i.e., find all occurrences.
1815                c  Do not reset search position on a failed match when /g is
1816                   in effect.
1817
1818               If "/" is the delimiter then the initial "m" is optional.  With
1819               the "m" you can use any pair of non-whitespace (ASCII)
1820               characters as delimiters.  This is particularly useful for
1821               matching path names that contain "/", to avoid LTS (leaning
1822               toothpick syndrome).  If "?" is the delimiter, then a match-
1823               only-once rule applies, described in "m?PATTERN?" below.  If
1824               "'" (single quote) is the delimiter, no variable interpolation
1825               is performed on the PATTERN.  When using a delimiter character
1826               valid in an identifier, whitespace is required after the "m".
1827
1828               PATTERN may contain variables, which will be interpolated every
1829               time the pattern search is evaluated, except for when the
1830               delimiter is a single quote.  (Note that $(, $), and $| are not
1831               interpolated because they look like end-of-string tests.)  Perl
1832               will not recompile the pattern unless an interpolated variable
1833               that it contains changes.  You can force Perl to skip the test
1834               and never recompile by adding a "/o" (which stands for "once")
1835               after the trailing delimiter.  Once upon a time, Perl would
1836               recompile regular expressions unnecessarily, and this modifier
1837               was useful to tell it not to do so, in the interests of speed.
1838               But now, the only reasons to use "/o" are one of:
1839
1840               1.  The variables are thousands of characters long and you know
1841                   that they don't change, and you need to wring out the last
1842                   little bit of speed by having Perl skip testing for that.
1843                   (There is a maintenance penalty for doing this, as
1844                   mentioning "/o" constitutes a promise that you won't change
1845                   the variables in the pattern.  If you do change them, Perl
1846                   won't even notice.)
1847
1848               2.  you want the pattern to use the initial values of the
1849                   variables regardless of whether they change or not.  (But
1850                   there are saner ways of accomplishing this than using
1851                   "/o".)
1852
1853               3.  If the pattern contains embedded code, such as
1854
1855                       use re 'eval';
1856                       $code = 'foo(?{ $x })';
1857                       /$code/
1858
1859                   then perl will recompile each time, even though the pattern
1860                   string hasn't changed, to ensure that the current value of
1861                   $x is seen each time.  Use "/o" if you want to avoid this.
1862
1863               The bottom line is that using "/o" is almost never a good idea.
1864
1865       The empty pattern "//"
1866               If the PATTERN evaluates to the empty string, the last
1867               successfully matched regular expression is used instead.  In
1868               this case, only the "g" and "c" flags on the empty pattern are
1869               honored; the other flags are taken from the original pattern.
1870               If no match has previously succeeded, this will (silently) act
1871               instead as a genuine empty pattern (which will always match).
1872
1873               Note that it's possible to confuse Perl into thinking "//" (the
1874               empty regex) is really "//" (the defined-or operator).  Perl is
1875               usually pretty good about this, but some pathological cases
1876               might trigger this, such as "$x///" (is that "($x) / (//)" or
1877               "$x // /"?) and "print $fh //" ("print $fh(//" or
1878               "print($fh //"?).  In all of these examples, Perl will assume
1879               you meant defined-or.  If you meant the empty regex, just use
1880               parentheses or spaces to disambiguate, or even prefix the empty
1881               regex with an "m" (so "//" becomes "m//").
1882
1883       Matching in list context
1884               If the "/g" option is not used, "m//" in list context returns a
1885               list consisting of the subexpressions matched by the
1886               parentheses in the pattern, that is, ($1, $2, $3...)  (Note
1887               that here $1 etc. are also set).  When there are no parentheses
1888               in the pattern, the return value is the list "(1)" for success.
1889               With or without parentheses, an empty list is returned upon
1890               failure.
1891
1892               Examples:
1893
1894                open(TTY, "+</dev/tty")
1895                   || die "can't access /dev/tty: $!";
1896
1897                <TTY> =~ /^y/i && foo();       # do foo if desired
1898
1899                if (/Version: *([0-9.]*)/) { $version = $1; }
1900
1901                next if m#^/usr/spool/uucp#;
1902
1903                # poor man's grep
1904                $arg = shift;
1905                while (<>) {
1906                   print if /$arg/o; # compile only once (no longer needed!)
1907                }
1908
1909                if (($F1, $F2, $Etc) = ($foo =~ /^(\S+)\s+(\S+)\s*(.*)/))
1910
1911               This last example splits $foo into the first two words and the
1912               remainder of the line, and assigns those three fields to $F1,
1913               $F2, and $Etc.  The conditional is true if any variables were
1914               assigned; that is, if the pattern matched.
1915
1916               The "/g" modifier specifies global pattern matching--that is,
1917               matching as many times as possible within the string.  How it
1918               behaves depends on the context.  In list context, it returns a
1919               list of the substrings matched by any capturing parentheses in
1920               the regular expression.  If there are no parentheses, it
1921               returns a list of all the matched strings, as if there were
1922               parentheses around the whole pattern.
1923
1924               In scalar context, each execution of "m//g" finds the next
1925               match, returning true if it matches, and false if there is no
1926               further match.  The position after the last match can be read
1927               or set using the "pos()" function; see "pos" in perlfunc.  A
1928               failed match normally resets the search position to the
1929               beginning of the string, but you can avoid that by adding the
1930               "/c" modifier (for example, "m//gc").  Modifying the target
1931               string also resets the search position.
1932
1933       "\G assertion"
1934               You can intermix "m//g" matches with "m/\G.../g", where "\G" is
1935               a zero-width assertion that matches the exact position where
1936               the previous "m//g", if any, left off.  Without the "/g"
1937               modifier, the "\G" assertion still anchors at "pos()" as it was
1938               at the start of the operation (see "pos" in perlfunc), but the
1939               match is of course only attempted once.  Using "\G" without
1940               "/g" on a target string that has not previously had a "/g"
1941               match applied to it is the same as using the "\A" assertion to
1942               match the beginning of the string.  Note also that, currently,
1943               "\G" is only properly supported when anchored at the very
1944               beginning of the pattern.
1945
1946               Examples:
1947
1948                   # list context
1949                   ($one,$five,$fifteen) = (`uptime` =~ /(\d+\.\d+)/g);
1950
1951                   # scalar context
1952                   local $/ = "";
1953                   while ($paragraph = <>) {
1954                       while ($paragraph =~ /\p{Ll}['")]*[.!?]+['")]*\s/g) {
1955                           $sentences++;
1956                       }
1957                   }
1958                   say $sentences;
1959
1960               Here's another way to check for sentences in a paragraph:
1961
1962                my $sentence_rx = qr{
1963                   (?: (?<= ^ ) | (?<= \s ) )  # after start-of-string or
1964                                               # whitespace
1965                   \p{Lu}                      # capital letter
1966                   .*?                         # a bunch of anything
1967                   (?<= \S )                   # that ends in non-
1968                                               # whitespace
1969                   (?<! \b [DMS]r  )           # but isn't a common abbr.
1970                   (?<! \b Mrs )
1971                   (?<! \b Sra )
1972                   (?<! \b St  )
1973                   [.?!]                       # followed by a sentence
1974                                               # ender
1975                   (?= $ | \s )                # in front of end-of-string
1976                                               # or whitespace
1977                }sx;
1978                local $/ = "";
1979                while (my $paragraph = <>) {
1980                   say "NEW PARAGRAPH";
1981                   my $count = 0;
1982                   while ($paragraph =~ /($sentence_rx)/g) {
1983                       printf "\tgot sentence %d: <%s>\n", ++$count, $1;
1984                   }
1985                }
1986
1987               Here's how to use "m//gc" with "\G":
1988
1989                   $_ = "ppooqppqq";
1990                   while ($i++ < 2) {
1991                       print "1: '";
1992                       print $1 while /(o)/gc; print "', pos=", pos, "\n";
1993                       print "2: '";
1994                       print $1 if /\G(q)/gc;  print "', pos=", pos, "\n";
1995                       print "3: '";
1996                       print $1 while /(p)/gc; print "', pos=", pos, "\n";
1997                   }
1998                   print "Final: '$1', pos=",pos,"\n" if /\G(.)/;
1999
2000               The last example should print:
2001
2002                   1: 'oo', pos=4
2003                   2: 'q', pos=5
2004                   3: 'pp', pos=7
2005                   1: '', pos=7
2006                   2: 'q', pos=8
2007                   3: '', pos=8
2008                   Final: 'q', pos=8
2009
2010               Notice that the final match matched "q" instead of "p", which a
2011               match without the "\G" anchor would have done.  Also note that
2012               the final match did not update "pos".  "pos" is only updated on
2013               a "/g" match.  If the final match did indeed match "p", it's a
2014               good bet that you're running an ancient (pre-5.6.0) version of
2015               Perl.
2016
2017               A useful idiom for "lex"-like scanners is "/\G.../gc".  You can
2018               combine several regexps like this to process a string part-by-
2019               part, doing different actions depending on which regexp
2020               matched.  Each regexp tries to match where the previous one
2021               leaves off.
2022
2023                $_ = <<'EOL';
2024                   $url = URI::URL->new( "http://example.com/" );
2025                   die if $url eq "xXx";
2026                EOL
2027
2028                LOOP: {
2029                    print(" digits"),       redo LOOP if /\G\d+\b[,.;]?\s*/gc;
2030                    print(" lowercase"),    redo LOOP
2031                                                   if /\G\p{Ll}+\b[,.;]?\s*/gc;
2032                    print(" UPPERCASE"),    redo LOOP
2033                                                   if /\G\p{Lu}+\b[,.;]?\s*/gc;
2034                    print(" Capitalized"),  redo LOOP
2035                                             if /\G\p{Lu}\p{Ll}+\b[,.;]?\s*/gc;
2036                    print(" MiXeD"),        redo LOOP if /\G\pL+\b[,.;]?\s*/gc;
2037                    print(" alphanumeric"), redo LOOP
2038                                           if /\G[\p{Alpha}\pN]+\b[,.;]?\s*/gc;
2039                    print(" line-noise"),   redo LOOP if /\G\W+/gc;
2040                    print ". That's all!\n";
2041                }
2042
2043               Here is the output (split into several lines):
2044
2045                line-noise lowercase line-noise UPPERCASE line-noise UPPERCASE
2046                line-noise lowercase line-noise lowercase line-noise lowercase
2047                lowercase line-noise lowercase lowercase line-noise lowercase
2048                lowercase line-noise MiXeD line-noise. That's all!
2049
2050       "m?PATTERN?msixpodualngc"
2051               This is just like the "m/PATTERN/" search, except that it
2052               matches only once between calls to the "reset()" operator.
2053               This is a useful optimization when you want to see only the
2054               first occurrence of something in each file of a set of files,
2055               for instance.  Only "m??"  patterns local to the current
2056               package are reset.
2057
2058                   while (<>) {
2059                       if (m?^$?) {
2060                                           # blank line between header and body
2061                       }
2062                   } continue {
2063                       reset if eof;       # clear m?? status for next file
2064                   }
2065
2066               Another example switched the first "latin1" encoding it finds
2067               to "utf8" in a pod file:
2068
2069                   s//utf8/ if m? ^ =encoding \h+ \K latin1 ?x;
2070
2071               The match-once behavior is controlled by the match delimiter
2072               being "?"; with any other delimiter this is the normal "m//"
2073               operator.
2074
2075               In the past, the leading "m" in "m?PATTERN?" was optional, but
2076               omitting it would produce a deprecation warning.  As of
2077               v5.22.0, omitting it produces a syntax error.  If you encounter
2078               this construct in older code, you can just add "m".
2079
2080       "s/PATTERN/REPLACEMENT/msixpodualngcer"
2081               Searches a string for a pattern, and if found, replaces that
2082               pattern with the replacement text and returns the number of
2083               substitutions made.  Otherwise it returns false (a value that
2084               is both an empty string ("") and numeric zero (0) as described
2085               in "Relational Operators").
2086
2087               If the "/r" (non-destructive) option is used then it runs the
2088               substitution on a copy of the string and instead of returning
2089               the number of substitutions, it returns the copy whether or not
2090               a substitution occurred.  The original string is never changed
2091               when "/r" is used.  The copy will always be a plain string,
2092               even if the input is an object or a tied variable.
2093
2094               If no string is specified via the "=~" or "!~" operator, the $_
2095               variable is searched and modified.  Unless the "/r" option is
2096               used, the string specified must be a scalar variable, an array
2097               element, a hash element, or an assignment to one of those; that
2098               is, some sort of scalar lvalue.
2099
2100               If the delimiter chosen is a single quote, no variable
2101               interpolation is done on either the PATTERN or the REPLACEMENT.
2102               Otherwise, if the PATTERN contains a "$" that looks like a
2103               variable rather than an end-of-string test, the variable will
2104               be interpolated into the pattern at run-time.  If you want the
2105               pattern compiled only once the first time the variable is
2106               interpolated, use the "/o" option.  If the pattern evaluates to
2107               the empty string, the last successfully executed regular
2108               expression is used instead.  See perlre for further explanation
2109               on these.
2110
2111               Options are as with "m//" with the addition of the following
2112               replacement specific options:
2113
2114                   e   Evaluate the right side as an expression.
2115                   ee  Evaluate the right side as a string then eval the
2116                       result.
2117                   r   Return substitution and leave the original string
2118                       untouched.
2119
2120               Any non-whitespace delimiter may replace the slashes.  Add
2121               space after the "s" when using a character allowed in
2122               identifiers.  If single quotes are used, no interpretation is
2123               done on the replacement string (the "/e" modifier overrides
2124               this, however).  Note that Perl treats backticks as normal
2125               delimiters; the replacement text is not evaluated as a command.
2126               If the PATTERN is delimited by bracketing quotes, the
2127               REPLACEMENT has its own pair of quotes, which may or may not be
2128               bracketing quotes, for example, "s(foo)(bar)" or "s<foo>/bar/".
2129               A "/e" will cause the replacement portion to be treated as a
2130               full-fledged Perl expression and evaluated right then and
2131               there.  It is, however, syntax checked at compile-time.  A
2132               second "e" modifier will cause the replacement portion to be
2133               "eval"ed before being run as a Perl expression.
2134
2135               Examples:
2136
2137                   s/\bgreen\b/mauve/g;              # don't change wintergreen
2138
2139                   $path =~ s|/usr/bin|/usr/local/bin|;
2140
2141                   s/Login: $foo/Login: $bar/; # run-time pattern
2142
2143                   ($foo = $bar) =~ s/this/that/;      # copy first, then
2144                                                       # change
2145                   ($foo = "$bar") =~ s/this/that/;    # convert to string,
2146                                                       # copy, then change
2147                   $foo = $bar =~ s/this/that/r;       # Same as above using /r
2148                   $foo = $bar =~ s/this/that/r
2149                               =~ s/that/the other/r;  # Chained substitutes
2150                                                       # using /r
2151                   @foo = map { s/this/that/r } @bar   # /r is very useful in
2152                                                       # maps
2153
2154                   $count = ($paragraph =~ s/Mister\b/Mr./g);  # get change-cnt
2155
2156                   $_ = 'abc123xyz';
2157                   s/\d+/$&*2/e;               # yields 'abc246xyz'
2158                   s/\d+/sprintf("%5d",$&)/e;  # yields 'abc  246xyz'
2159                   s/\w/$& x 2/eg;             # yields 'aabbcc  224466xxyyzz'
2160
2161                   s/%(.)/$percent{$1}/g;      # change percent escapes; no /e
2162                   s/%(.)/$percent{$1} || $&/ge;       # expr now, so /e
2163                   s/^=(\w+)/pod($1)/ge;       # use function call
2164
2165                   $_ = 'abc123xyz';
2166                   $x = s/abc/def/r;           # $x is 'def123xyz' and
2167                                               # $_ remains 'abc123xyz'.
2168
2169                   # expand variables in $_, but dynamics only, using
2170                   # symbolic dereferencing
2171                   s/\$(\w+)/${$1}/g;
2172
2173                   # Add one to the value of any numbers in the string
2174                   s/(\d+)/1 + $1/eg;
2175
2176                   # Titlecase words in the last 30 characters only
2177                   substr($str, -30) =~ s/\b(\p{Alpha}+)\b/\u\L$1/g;
2178
2179                   # This will expand any embedded scalar variable
2180                   # (including lexicals) in $_ : First $1 is interpolated
2181                   # to the variable name, and then evaluated
2182                   s/(\$\w+)/$1/eeg;
2183
2184                   # Delete (most) C comments.
2185                   $program =~ s {
2186                       /\*     # Match the opening delimiter.
2187                       .*?     # Match a minimal number of characters.
2188                       \*/     # Match the closing delimiter.
2189                   } []gsx;
2190
2191                   s/^\s*(.*?)\s*$/$1/;        # trim whitespace in $_,
2192                                               # expensively
2193
2194                   for ($variable) {           # trim whitespace in $variable,
2195                                               # cheap
2196                       s/^\s+//;
2197                       s/\s+$//;
2198                   }
2199
2200                   s/([^ ]*) *([^ ]*)/$2 $1/;  # reverse 1st two fields
2201
2202                   $foo !~ s/A/a/g;    # Lowercase all A's in $foo; return
2203                                       # 0 if any were found and changed;
2204                                       # otherwise return 1
2205
2206               Note the use of "$" instead of "\" in the last example.  Unlike
2207               sed, we use the \<digit> form only in the left hand side.
2208               Anywhere else it's $<digit>.
2209
2210               Occasionally, you can't use just a "/g" to get all the changes
2211               to occur that you might want.  Here are two common cases:
2212
2213                   # put commas in the right places in an integer
2214                   1 while s/(\d)(\d\d\d)(?!\d)/$1,$2/g;
2215
2216                   # expand tabs to 8-column spacing
2217                   1 while s/\t+/' ' x (length($&)*8 - length($`)%8)/e;
2218
2219               While "s///" accepts the "/c" flag, it has no effect beyond
2220               producing a warning if warnings are enabled.
2221
2222   Quote-Like Operators
2223       "q/STRING/"
2224       'STRING'
2225           A single-quoted, literal string.  A backslash represents a
2226           backslash unless followed by the delimiter or another backslash, in
2227           which case the delimiter or backslash is interpolated.
2228
2229               $foo = q!I said, "You said, 'She said it.'"!;
2230               $bar = q('This is it.');
2231               $baz = '\n';                # a two-character string
2232
2233       "qq/STRING/"
2234       "STRING"
2235           A double-quoted, interpolated string.
2236
2237               $_ .= qq
2238                (*** The previous line contains the naughty word "$1".\n)
2239                           if /\b(tcl|java|python)\b/i;      # :-)
2240               $baz = "\n";                # a one-character string
2241
2242       "qx/STRING/"
2243       "`STRING`"
2244           A string which is (possibly) interpolated and then executed as a
2245           system command, via /bin/sh or its equivalent if required.  Shell
2246           wildcards, pipes, and redirections will be honored.  Similarly to
2247           "system", if the string contains no shell metacharacters then it
2248           will executed directly.  The collected standard output of the
2249           command is returned; standard error is unaffected.  In scalar
2250           context, it comes back as a single (potentially multi-line) string,
2251           or "undef" if the shell (or command) could not be started.  In list
2252           context, returns a list of lines (however you've defined lines with
2253           $/ or $INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR), or an empty list if the shell (or
2254           command) could not be started.
2255
2256           Because backticks do not affect standard error, use shell file
2257           descriptor syntax (assuming the shell supports this) if you care to
2258           address this.  To capture a command's STDERR and STDOUT together:
2259
2260               $output = `cmd 2>&1`;
2261
2262           To capture a command's STDOUT but discard its STDERR:
2263
2264               $output = `cmd 2>/dev/null`;
2265
2266           To capture a command's STDERR but discard its STDOUT (ordering is
2267           important here):
2268
2269               $output = `cmd 2>&1 1>/dev/null`;
2270
2271           To exchange a command's STDOUT and STDERR in order to capture the
2272           STDERR but leave its STDOUT to come out the old STDERR:
2273
2274               $output = `cmd 3>&1 1>&2 2>&3 3>&-`;
2275
2276           To read both a command's STDOUT and its STDERR separately, it's
2277           easiest to redirect them separately to files, and then read from
2278           those files when the program is done:
2279
2280               system("program args 1>program.stdout 2>program.stderr");
2281
2282           The STDIN filehandle used by the command is inherited from Perl's
2283           STDIN.  For example:
2284
2285               open(SPLAT, "stuff")   || die "can't open stuff: $!";
2286               open(STDIN, "<&SPLAT") || die "can't dupe SPLAT: $!";
2287               print STDOUT `sort`;
2288
2289           will print the sorted contents of the file named "stuff".
2290
2291           Using single-quote as a delimiter protects the command from Perl's
2292           double-quote interpolation, passing it on to the shell instead:
2293
2294               $perl_info  = qx(ps $$);            # that's Perl's $$
2295               $shell_info = qx'ps $$';            # that's the new shell's $$
2296
2297           How that string gets evaluated is entirely subject to the command
2298           interpreter on your system.  On most platforms, you will have to
2299           protect shell metacharacters if you want them treated literally.
2300           This is in practice difficult to do, as it's unclear how to escape
2301           which characters.  See perlsec for a clean and safe example of a
2302           manual "fork()" and "exec()" to emulate backticks safely.
2303
2304           On some platforms (notably DOS-like ones), the shell may not be
2305           capable of dealing with multiline commands, so putting newlines in
2306           the string may not get you what you want.  You may be able to
2307           evaluate multiple commands in a single line by separating them with
2308           the command separator character, if your shell supports that (for
2309           example, ";" on many Unix shells and "&" on the Windows NT "cmd"
2310           shell).
2311
2312           Perl will attempt to flush all files opened for output before
2313           starting the child process, but this may not be supported on some
2314           platforms (see perlport).  To be safe, you may need to set $|
2315           ($AUTOFLUSH in "English") or call the "autoflush()" method of
2316           "IO::Handle" on any open handles.
2317
2318           Beware that some command shells may place restrictions on the
2319           length of the command line.  You must ensure your strings don't
2320           exceed this limit after any necessary interpolations.  See the
2321           platform-specific release notes for more details about your
2322           particular environment.
2323
2324           Using this operator can lead to programs that are difficult to
2325           port, because the shell commands called vary between systems, and
2326           may in fact not be present at all.  As one example, the "type"
2327           command under the POSIX shell is very different from the "type"
2328           command under DOS.  That doesn't mean you should go out of your way
2329           to avoid backticks when they're the right way to get something
2330           done.  Perl was made to be a glue language, and one of the things
2331           it glues together is commands.  Just understand what you're getting
2332           yourself into.
2333
2334           Like "system", backticks put the child process exit code in $?.  If
2335           you'd like to manually inspect failure, you can check all possible
2336           failure modes by inspecting $? like this:
2337
2338               if ($? == -1) {
2339                   print "failed to execute: $!\n";
2340               }
2341               elsif ($? & 127) {
2342                   printf "child died with signal %d, %s coredump\n",
2343                       ($? & 127),  ($? & 128) ? 'with' : 'without';
2344               }
2345               else {
2346                   printf "child exited with value %d\n", $? >> 8;
2347               }
2348
2349           Use the open pragma to control the I/O layers used when reading the
2350           output of the command, for example:
2351
2352             use open IN => ":encoding(UTF-8)";
2353             my $x = `cmd-producing-utf-8`;
2354
2355           "qx//" can also be called like a function with "readpipe" in
2356           perlfunc.
2357
2358           See "I/O Operators" for more discussion.
2359
2360       "qw/STRING/"
2361           Evaluates to a list of the words extracted out of STRING, using
2362           embedded whitespace as the word delimiters.  It can be understood
2363           as being roughly equivalent to:
2364
2365               split(" ", q/STRING/);
2366
2367           the differences being that it only splits on ASCII whitespace,
2368           generates a real list at compile time, and in scalar context it
2369           returns the last element in the list.  So this expression:
2370
2371               qw(foo bar baz)
2372
2373           is semantically equivalent to the list:
2374
2375               "foo", "bar", "baz"
2376
2377           Some frequently seen examples:
2378
2379               use POSIX qw( setlocale localeconv )
2380               @EXPORT = qw( foo bar baz );
2381
2382           A common mistake is to try to separate the words with commas or to
2383           put comments into a multi-line "qw"-string.  For this reason, the
2384           "use warnings" pragma and the -w switch (that is, the $^W variable)
2385           produces warnings if the STRING contains the "," or the "#"
2386           character.
2387
2388       "tr/SEARCHLIST/REPLACEMENTLIST/cdsr"
2389       "y/SEARCHLIST/REPLACEMENTLIST/cdsr"
2390           Transliterates all occurrences of the characters found (or not
2391           found if the "/c" modifier is specified) in the search list with
2392           the positionally corresponding character in the replacement list,
2393           possibly deleting some, depending on the modifiers specified.  It
2394           returns the number of characters replaced or deleted.  If no string
2395           is specified via the "=~" or "!~" operator, the $_ string is
2396           transliterated.
2397
2398           For sed devotees, "y" is provided as a synonym for "tr".
2399
2400           If the "/r" (non-destructive) option is present, a new copy of the
2401           string is made and its characters transliterated, and this copy is
2402           returned no matter whether it was modified or not: the original
2403           string is always left unchanged.  The new copy is always a plain
2404           string, even if the input string is an object or a tied variable.
2405
2406           Unless the "/r" option is used, the string specified with "=~" must
2407           be a scalar variable, an array element, a hash element, or an
2408           assignment to one of those; in other words, an lvalue.
2409
2410           The characters delimitting SEARCHLIST and REPLACEMENTLIST can be
2411           any printable character, not just forward slashes.  If they are
2412           single quotes ("tr'SEARCHLIST'REPLACEMENTLIST'"), the only
2413           interpolation is removal of "\" from pairs of "\\".
2414
2415           Otherwise, a character range may be specified with a hyphen, so
2416           "tr/A-J/0-9/" does the same replacement as
2417           "tr/ACEGIBDFHJ/0246813579/".
2418
2419           If the SEARCHLIST is delimited by bracketing quotes, the
2420           REPLACEMENTLIST must have its own pair of quotes, which may or may
2421           not be bracketing quotes; for example, "tr[aeiouy][yuoiea]" or
2422           "tr(+\-*/)/ABCD/".
2423
2424           Characters may be literals, or (if the delimiters aren't single
2425           quotes) any of the escape sequences accepted in double-quoted
2426           strings.  But there is never any variable interpolation, so "$" and
2427           "@" are always treated as literals.  A hyphen at the beginning or
2428           end, or preceded by a backslash is also always considered a
2429           literal.  Escape sequence details are in the table near the
2430           beginning of this section.
2431
2432           Note that "tr" does not do regular expression character classes
2433           such as "\d" or "\pL".  The "tr" operator is not equivalent to the
2434           tr(1) utility.  "tr[a-z][A-Z]" will uppercase the 26 letters "a"
2435           through "z", but for case changing not confined to ASCII, use "lc",
2436           "uc", "lcfirst", "ucfirst" (all documented in perlfunc), or the
2437           substitution operator "s/PATTERN/REPLACEMENT/" (with "\U", "\u",
2438           "\L", and "\l" string-interpolation escapes in the REPLACEMENT
2439           portion).
2440
2441           Most ranges are unportable between character sets, but certain ones
2442           signal Perl to do special handling to make them portable.  There
2443           are two classes of portable ranges.  The first are any subsets of
2444           the ranges "A-Z", "a-z", and "0-9", when expressed as literal
2445           characters.
2446
2447             tr/h-k/H-K/
2448
2449           capitalizes the letters "h", "i", "j", and "k" and nothing else, no
2450           matter what the platform's character set is.  In contrast, all of
2451
2452             tr/\x68-\x6B/\x48-\x4B/
2453             tr/h-\x6B/H-\x4B/
2454             tr/\x68-k/\x48-K/
2455
2456           do the same capitalizations as the previous example when run on
2457           ASCII platforms, but something completely different on EBCDIC ones.
2458
2459           The second class of portable ranges is invoked when one or both of
2460           the range's end points are expressed as "\N{...}"
2461
2462            $string =~ tr/\N{U+20}-\N{U+7E}//d;
2463
2464           removes from $string all the platform's characters which are
2465           equivalent to any of Unicode U+0020, U+0021, ... U+007D, U+007E.
2466           This is a portable range, and has the same effect on every platform
2467           it is run on.  In this example, these are the ASCII printable
2468           characters.  So after this is run, $string has only controls and
2469           characters which have no ASCII equivalents.
2470
2471           But, even for portable ranges, it is not generally obvious what is
2472           included without having to look things up in the manual.  A sound
2473           principle is to use only ranges that both begin from, and end at,
2474           either ASCII alphabetics of equal case ("b-e", "B-E"), or digits
2475           ("1-4").  Anything else is unclear (and unportable unless "\N{...}"
2476           is used).  If in doubt, spell out the character sets in full.
2477
2478           Options:
2479
2480               c   Complement the SEARCHLIST.
2481               d   Delete found but unreplaced characters.
2482               r   Return the modified string and leave the original string
2483                   untouched.
2484               s   Squash duplicate replaced characters.
2485
2486           If the "/d" modifier is specified, any characters specified by
2487           SEARCHLIST  not found in REPLACEMENTLIST are deleted.  (Note that
2488           this is slightly more flexible than the behavior of some tr
2489           programs, which delete anything they find in the SEARCHLIST,
2490           period.)
2491
2492           If the "/s" modifier is specified, sequences of characters, all in
2493           a row, that were transliterated to the same character are squashed
2494           down to a single instance of that character.
2495
2496            my $a = "aaabbbca";
2497            $a =~ tr/ab/dd/s;     # $a now is "dcd"
2498
2499           If the "/d" modifier is used, the REPLACEMENTLIST is always
2500           interpreted exactly as specified.  Otherwise, if the
2501           REPLACEMENTLIST is shorter than the SEARCHLIST, the final
2502           character, if any, is replicated until it is long enough.  There
2503           won't be a final character if and only if the REPLACEMENTLIST is
2504           empty, in which case REPLACEMENTLIST is copied from SEARCHLIST.
2505           An empty REPLACEMENTLIST is useful for counting characters in a
2506           class, or for squashing character sequences in a class.
2507
2508               tr/abcd//            tr/abcd/abcd/
2509               tr/abcd/AB/          tr/abcd/ABBB/
2510               tr/abcd//d           s/[abcd]//g
2511               tr/abcd/AB/d         (tr/ab/AB/ + s/[cd]//g)  - but run together
2512
2513           If the "/c" modifier is specified, the characters to be
2514           transliterated are the ones NOT in SEARCHLIST, that is, it is
2515           complemented.  If "/d" and/or "/s" are also specified, they apply
2516           to the complemented SEARCHLIST.  Recall, that if REPLACEMENTLIST is
2517           empty (except under "/d") a copy of SEARCHLIST is used instead.
2518           That copy is made after complementing under "/c".  SEARCHLIST is
2519           sorted by code point order after complementing, and any
2520           REPLACEMENTLIST  is applied to that sorted result.  This means that
2521           under "/c", the order of the characters specified in SEARCHLIST is
2522           irrelevant.  This can lead to different results on EBCDIC systems
2523           if REPLACEMENTLIST contains more than one character, hence it is
2524           generally non-portable to use "/c" with such a REPLACEMENTLIST.
2525
2526           Another way of describing the operation is this: If "/c" is
2527           specified, the SEARCHLIST is sorted by code point order, then
2528           complemented.  If REPLACEMENTLIST is empty and "/d" is not
2529           specified, REPLACEMENTLIST is replaced by a copy of SEARCHLIST (as
2530           modified under "/c"), and these potentially modified lists are used
2531           as the basis for what follows.  Any character in the target string
2532           that isn't in SEARCHLIST is passed through unchanged.  Every other
2533           character in the target string is replaced by the character in
2534           REPLACEMENTLIST that positionally corresponds to its mate in
2535           SEARCHLIST, except that under "/s", the 2nd and following
2536           characters are squeezed out in a sequence of characters in a row
2537           that all translate to the same character.  If SEARCHLIST is longer
2538           than REPLACEMENTLIST, characters in the target string that match a
2539           character in SEARCHLIST that doesn't have a correspondence in
2540           REPLACEMENTLIST are either deleted from the target string if "/d"
2541           is specified; or replaced by the final character in REPLACEMENTLIST
2542           if "/d" isn't specified.
2543
2544           Some examples:
2545
2546            $ARGV[1] =~ tr/A-Z/a-z/;   # canonicalize to lower case ASCII
2547
2548            $cnt = tr/*/*/;            # count the stars in $_
2549            $cnt = tr/*//;             # same thing
2550
2551            $cnt = $sky =~ tr/*/*/;    # count the stars in $sky
2552            $cnt = $sky =~ tr/*//;     # same thing
2553
2554            $cnt = $sky =~ tr/*//c;    # count all the non-stars in $sky
2555            $cnt = $sky =~ tr/*/*/c;   # same, but transliterate each non-star
2556                                       # into a star, leaving the already-stars
2557                                       # alone.  Afterwards, everything in $sky
2558                                       # is a star.
2559
2560            $cnt = tr/0-9//;           # count the ASCII digits in $_
2561
2562            tr/a-zA-Z//s;              # bookkeeper -> bokeper
2563            tr/o/o/s;                  # bookkeeper -> bokkeeper
2564            tr/oe/oe/s;                # bookkeeper -> bokkeper
2565            tr/oe//s;                  # bookkeeper -> bokkeper
2566            tr/oe/o/s;                 # bookkeeper -> bokkopor
2567
2568            ($HOST = $host) =~ tr/a-z/A-Z/;
2569             $HOST = $host  =~ tr/a-z/A-Z/r; # same thing
2570
2571            $HOST = $host =~ tr/a-z/A-Z/r   # chained with s///r
2572                          =~ s/:/ -p/r;
2573
2574            tr/a-zA-Z/ /cs;                 # change non-alphas to single space
2575
2576            @stripped = map tr/a-zA-Z/ /csr, @original;
2577                                            # /r with map
2578
2579            tr [\200-\377]
2580               [\000-\177];                 # wickedly delete 8th bit
2581
2582            $foo !~ tr/A/a/    # transliterate all the A's in $foo to 'a',
2583                               # return 0 if any were found and changed.
2584                               # Otherwise return 1
2585
2586           If multiple transliterations are given for a character, only the
2587           first one is used:
2588
2589            tr/AAA/XYZ/
2590
2591           will transliterate any A to X.
2592
2593           Because the transliteration table is built at compile time, neither
2594           the SEARCHLIST nor the REPLACEMENTLIST are subjected to double
2595           quote interpolation.  That means that if you want to use variables,
2596           you must use an "eval()":
2597
2598            eval "tr/$oldlist/$newlist/";
2599            die $@ if $@;
2600
2601            eval "tr/$oldlist/$newlist/, 1" or die $@;
2602
2603       "<<EOF"
2604           A line-oriented form of quoting is based on the shell "here-
2605           document" syntax.  Following a "<<" you specify a string to
2606           terminate the quoted material, and all lines following the current
2607           line down to the terminating string are the value of the item.
2608
2609           Prefixing the terminating string with a "~" specifies that you want
2610           to use "Indented Here-docs" (see below).
2611
2612           The terminating string may be either an identifier (a word), or
2613           some quoted text.  An unquoted identifier works like double quotes.
2614           There may not be a space between the "<<" and the identifier,
2615           unless the identifier is explicitly quoted.  The terminating string
2616           must appear by itself (unquoted and with no surrounding whitespace)
2617           on the terminating line.
2618
2619           If the terminating string is quoted, the type of quotes used
2620           determine the treatment of the text.
2621
2622           Double Quotes
2623               Double quotes indicate that the text will be interpolated using
2624               exactly the same rules as normal double quoted strings.
2625
2626                      print <<EOF;
2627                   The price is $Price.
2628                   EOF
2629
2630                      print << "EOF"; # same as above
2631                   The price is $Price.
2632                   EOF
2633
2634           Single Quotes
2635               Single quotes indicate the text is to be treated literally with
2636               no interpolation of its content.  This is similar to single
2637               quoted strings except that backslashes have no special meaning,
2638               with "\\" being treated as two backslashes and not one as they
2639               would in every other quoting construct.
2640
2641               Just as in the shell, a backslashed bareword following the "<<"
2642               means the same thing as a single-quoted string does:
2643
2644                       $cost = <<'VISTA';  # hasta la ...
2645                   That'll be $10 please, ma'am.
2646                   VISTA
2647
2648                       $cost = <<\VISTA;   # Same thing!
2649                   That'll be $10 please, ma'am.
2650                   VISTA
2651
2652               This is the only form of quoting in perl where there is no need
2653               to worry about escaping content, something that code generators
2654               can and do make good use of.
2655
2656           Backticks
2657               The content of the here doc is treated just as it would be if
2658               the string were embedded in backticks.  Thus the content is
2659               interpolated as though it were double quoted and then executed
2660               via the shell, with the results of the execution returned.
2661
2662                      print << `EOC`; # execute command and get results
2663                   echo hi there
2664                   EOC
2665
2666           Indented Here-docs
2667               The here-doc modifier "~" allows you to indent your here-docs
2668               to make the code more readable:
2669
2670                   if ($some_var) {
2671                     print <<~EOF;
2672                       This is a here-doc
2673                       EOF
2674                   }
2675
2676               This will print...
2677
2678                   This is a here-doc
2679
2680               ...with no leading whitespace.
2681
2682               The delimiter is used to determine the exact whitespace to
2683               remove from the beginning of each line.  All lines must have at
2684               least the same starting whitespace (except lines only
2685               containing a newline) or perl will croak.  Tabs and spaces can
2686               be mixed, but are matched exactly.  One tab will not be equal
2687               to 8 spaces!
2688
2689               Additional beginning whitespace (beyond what preceded the
2690               delimiter) will be preserved:
2691
2692                   print <<~EOF;
2693                     This text is not indented
2694                       This text is indented with two spaces
2695                               This text is indented with two tabs
2696                     EOF
2697
2698               Finally, the modifier may be used with all of the forms
2699               mentioned above:
2700
2701                   <<~\EOF;
2702                   <<~'EOF'
2703                   <<~"EOF"
2704                   <<~`EOF`
2705
2706               And whitespace may be used between the "~" and quoted
2707               delimiters:
2708
2709                   <<~ 'EOF'; # ... "EOF", `EOF`
2710
2711           It is possible to stack multiple here-docs in a row:
2712
2713                  print <<"foo", <<"bar"; # you can stack them
2714               I said foo.
2715               foo
2716               I said bar.
2717               bar
2718
2719                  myfunc(<< "THIS", 23, <<'THAT');
2720               Here's a line
2721               or two.
2722               THIS
2723               and here's another.
2724               THAT
2725
2726           Just don't forget that you have to put a semicolon on the end to
2727           finish the statement, as Perl doesn't know you're not going to try
2728           to do this:
2729
2730                  print <<ABC
2731               179231
2732               ABC
2733                  + 20;
2734
2735           If you want to remove the line terminator from your here-docs, use
2736           "chomp()".
2737
2738               chomp($string = <<'END');
2739               This is a string.
2740               END
2741
2742           If you want your here-docs to be indented with the rest of the
2743           code, use the "<<~FOO" construct described under "Indented Here-
2744           docs":
2745
2746               $quote = <<~'FINIS';
2747                  The Road goes ever on and on,
2748                  down from the door where it began.
2749                  FINIS
2750
2751           If you use a here-doc within a delimited construct, such as in
2752           "s///eg", the quoted material must still come on the line following
2753           the "<<FOO" marker, which means it may be inside the delimited
2754           construct:
2755
2756               s/this/<<E . 'that'
2757               the other
2758               E
2759                . 'more '/eg;
2760
2761           It works this way as of Perl 5.18.  Historically, it was
2762           inconsistent, and you would have to write
2763
2764               s/this/<<E . 'that'
2765                . 'more '/eg;
2766               the other
2767               E
2768
2769           outside of string evals.
2770
2771           Additionally, quoting rules for the end-of-string identifier are
2772           unrelated to Perl's quoting rules.  "q()", "qq()", and the like are
2773           not supported in place of '' and "", and the only interpolation is
2774           for backslashing the quoting character:
2775
2776               print << "abc\"def";
2777               testing...
2778               abc"def
2779
2780           Finally, quoted strings cannot span multiple lines.  The general
2781           rule is that the identifier must be a string literal.  Stick with
2782           that, and you should be safe.
2783
2784   Gory details of parsing quoted constructs
2785       When presented with something that might have several different
2786       interpretations, Perl uses the DWIM (that's "Do What I Mean") principle
2787       to pick the most probable interpretation.  This strategy is so
2788       successful that Perl programmers often do not suspect the ambivalence
2789       of what they write.  But from time to time, Perl's notions differ
2790       substantially from what the author honestly meant.
2791
2792       This section hopes to clarify how Perl handles quoted constructs.
2793       Although the most common reason to learn this is to unravel
2794       labyrinthine regular expressions, because the initial steps of parsing
2795       are the same for all quoting operators, they are all discussed
2796       together.
2797
2798       The most important Perl parsing rule is the first one discussed below:
2799       when processing a quoted construct, Perl first finds the end of that
2800       construct, then interprets its contents.  If you understand this rule,
2801       you may skip the rest of this section on the first reading.  The other
2802       rules are likely to contradict the user's expectations much less
2803       frequently than this first one.
2804
2805       Some passes discussed below are performed concurrently, but because
2806       their results are the same, we consider them individually.  For
2807       different quoting constructs, Perl performs different numbers of
2808       passes, from one to four, but these passes are always performed in the
2809       same order.
2810
2811       Finding the end
2812           The first pass is finding the end of the quoted construct.  This
2813           results in saving to a safe location a copy of the text (between
2814           the starting and ending delimiters), normalized as necessary to
2815           avoid needing to know what the original delimiters were.
2816
2817           If the construct is a here-doc, the ending delimiter is a line that
2818           has a terminating string as the content.  Therefore "<<EOF" is
2819           terminated by "EOF" immediately followed by "\n" and starting from
2820           the first column of the terminating line.  When searching for the
2821           terminating line of a here-doc, nothing is skipped.  In other
2822           words, lines after the here-doc syntax are compared with the
2823           terminating string line by line.
2824
2825           For the constructs except here-docs, single characters are used as
2826           starting and ending delimiters.  If the starting delimiter is an
2827           opening punctuation (that is "(", "[", "{", or "<"), the ending
2828           delimiter is the corresponding closing punctuation (that is ")",
2829           "]", "}", or ">").  If the starting delimiter is an unpaired
2830           character like "/" or a closing punctuation, the ending delimiter
2831           is the same as the starting delimiter.  Therefore a "/" terminates
2832           a "qq//" construct, while a "]" terminates both "qq[]" and "qq]]"
2833           constructs.
2834
2835           When searching for single-character delimiters, escaped delimiters
2836           and "\\" are skipped.  For example, while searching for terminating
2837           "/", combinations of "\\" and "\/" are skipped.  If the delimiters
2838           are bracketing, nested pairs are also skipped.  For example, while
2839           searching for a closing "]" paired with the opening "[",
2840           combinations of "\\", "\]", and "\[" are all skipped, and nested
2841           "[" and "]" are skipped as well.  However, when backslashes are
2842           used as the delimiters (like "qq\\" and "tr\\\"), nothing is
2843           skipped.  During the search for the end, backslashes that escape
2844           delimiters or other backslashes are removed (exactly speaking, they
2845           are not copied to the safe location).
2846
2847           For constructs with three-part delimiters ("s///", "y///", and
2848           "tr///"), the search is repeated once more.  If the first delimiter
2849           is not an opening punctuation, the three delimiters must be the
2850           same, such as "s!!!" and "tr)))", in which case the second
2851           delimiter terminates the left part and starts the right part at
2852           once.  If the left part is delimited by bracketing punctuation
2853           (that is "()", "[]", "{}", or "<>"), the right part needs another
2854           pair of delimiters such as "s(){}" and "tr[]//".  In these cases,
2855           whitespace and comments are allowed between the two parts, although
2856           the comment must follow at least one whitespace character;
2857           otherwise a character expected as the start of the comment may be
2858           regarded as the starting delimiter of the right part.
2859
2860           During this search no attention is paid to the semantics of the
2861           construct.  Thus:
2862
2863               "$hash{"$foo/$bar"}"
2864
2865           or:
2866
2867               m/
2868                 bar       # NOT a comment, this slash / terminated m//!
2869                /x
2870
2871           do not form legal quoted expressions.   The quoted part ends on the
2872           first """ and "/", and the rest happens to be a syntax error.
2873           Because the slash that terminated "m//" was followed by a "SPACE",
2874           the example above is not "m//x", but rather "m//" with no "/x"
2875           modifier.  So the embedded "#" is interpreted as a literal "#".
2876
2877           Also no attention is paid to "\c\" (multichar control char syntax)
2878           during this search.  Thus the second "\" in "qq/\c\/" is
2879           interpreted as a part of "\/", and the following "/" is not
2880           recognized as a delimiter.  Instead, use "\034" or "\x1c" at the
2881           end of quoted constructs.
2882
2883       Interpolation
2884           The next step is interpolation in the text obtained, which is now
2885           delimiter-independent.  There are multiple cases.
2886
2887           "<<'EOF'"
2888               No interpolation is performed.  Note that the combination "\\"
2889               is left intact, since escaped delimiters are not available for
2890               here-docs.
2891
2892           "m''", the pattern of "s'''"
2893               No interpolation is performed at this stage.  Any backslashed
2894               sequences including "\\" are treated at the stage to "parsing
2895               regular expressions".
2896
2897           '', "q//", "tr'''", "y'''", the replacement of "s'''"
2898               The only interpolation is removal of "\" from pairs of "\\".
2899               Therefore "-" in "tr'''" and "y'''" is treated literally as a
2900               hyphen and no character range is available.  "\1" in the
2901               replacement of "s'''" does not work as $1.
2902
2903           "tr///", "y///"
2904               No variable interpolation occurs.  String modifying
2905               combinations for case and quoting such as "\Q", "\U", and "\E"
2906               are not recognized.  The other escape sequences such as "\200"
2907               and "\t" and backslashed characters such as "\\" and "\-" are
2908               converted to appropriate literals.  The character "-" is
2909               treated specially and therefore "\-" is treated as a literal
2910               "-".
2911
2912           "", "``", "qq//", "qx//", "<file*glob>", "<<"EOF""
2913               "\Q", "\U", "\u", "\L", "\l", "\F" (possibly paired with "\E")
2914               are converted to corresponding Perl constructs.  Thus,
2915               "$foo\Qbaz$bar" is converted to
2916               "$foo . (quotemeta("baz" . $bar))" internally.  The other
2917               escape sequences such as "\200" and "\t" and backslashed
2918               characters such as "\\" and "\-" are replaced with appropriate
2919               expansions.
2920
2921               Let it be stressed that whatever falls between "\Q" and "\E" is
2922               interpolated in the usual way.  Something like "\Q\\E" has no
2923               "\E" inside.  Instead, it has "\Q", "\\", and "E", so the
2924               result is the same as for "\\\\E".  As a general rule,
2925               backslashes between "\Q" and "\E" may lead to counterintuitive
2926               results.  So, "\Q\t\E" is converted to "quotemeta("\t")", which
2927               is the same as "\\\t" (since TAB is not alphanumeric).  Note
2928               also that:
2929
2930                 $str = '\t';
2931                 return "\Q$str";
2932
2933               may be closer to the conjectural intention of the writer of
2934               "\Q\t\E".
2935
2936               Interpolated scalars and arrays are converted internally to the
2937               "join" and "." catenation operations.  Thus, "$foo XXX '@arr'"
2938               becomes:
2939
2940                 $foo . " XXX '" . (join $", @arr) . "'";
2941
2942               All operations above are performed simultaneously, left to
2943               right.
2944
2945               Because the result of "\Q STRING \E" has all metacharacters
2946               quoted, there is no way to insert a literal "$" or "@" inside a
2947               "\Q\E" pair.  If protected by "\", "$" will be quoted to become
2948               "\\\$"; if not, it is interpreted as the start of an
2949               interpolated scalar.
2950
2951               Note also that the interpolation code needs to make a decision
2952               on where the interpolated scalar ends.  For instance, whether
2953               "a $x -> {c}" really means:
2954
2955                 "a " . $x . " -> {c}";
2956
2957               or:
2958
2959                 "a " . $x -> {c};
2960
2961               Most of the time, the longest possible text that does not
2962               include spaces between components and which contains matching
2963               braces or brackets.  because the outcome may be determined by
2964               voting based on heuristic estimators, the result is not
2965               strictly predictable.  Fortunately, it's usually correct for
2966               ambiguous cases.
2967
2968           the replacement of "s///"
2969               Processing of "\Q", "\U", "\u", "\L", "\l", "\F" and
2970               interpolation happens as with "qq//" constructs.
2971
2972               It is at this step that "\1" is begrudgingly converted to $1 in
2973               the replacement text of "s///", in order to correct the
2974               incorrigible sed hackers who haven't picked up the saner idiom
2975               yet.  A warning is emitted if the "use warnings" pragma or the
2976               -w command-line flag (that is, the $^W variable) was set.
2977
2978           "RE" in "m?RE?", "/RE/", "m/RE/", "s/RE/foo/",
2979               Processing of "\Q", "\U", "\u", "\L", "\l", "\F", "\E", and
2980               interpolation happens (almost) as with "qq//" constructs.
2981
2982               Processing of "\N{...}" is also done here, and compiled into an
2983               intermediate form for the regex compiler.  (This is because, as
2984               mentioned below, the regex compilation may be done at execution
2985               time, and "\N{...}" is a compile-time construct.)
2986
2987               However any other combinations of "\" followed by a character
2988               are not substituted but only skipped, in order to parse them as
2989               regular expressions at the following step.  As "\c" is skipped
2990               at this step, "@" of "\c@" in RE is possibly treated as an
2991               array symbol (for example @foo), even though the same text in
2992               "qq//" gives interpolation of "\c@".
2993
2994               Code blocks such as "(?{BLOCK})" are handled by temporarily
2995               passing control back to the perl parser, in a similar way that
2996               an interpolated array subscript expression such as
2997               "foo$array[1+f("[xyz")]bar" would be.
2998
2999               Moreover, inside "(?{BLOCK})", "(?# comment )", and a
3000               "#"-comment in a "/x"-regular expression, no processing is
3001               performed whatsoever.  This is the first step at which the
3002               presence of the "/x" modifier is relevant.
3003
3004               Interpolation in patterns has several quirks: $|, $(, $), "@+"
3005               and "@-" are not interpolated, and constructs $var[SOMETHING]
3006               are voted (by several different estimators) to be either an
3007               array element or $var followed by an RE alternative.  This is
3008               where the notation "${arr[$bar]}" comes handy: "/${arr[0-9]}/"
3009               is interpreted as array element "-9", not as a regular
3010               expression from the variable $arr followed by a digit, which
3011               would be the interpretation of "/$arr[0-9]/".  Since voting
3012               among different estimators may occur, the result is not
3013               predictable.
3014
3015               The lack of processing of "\\" creates specific restrictions on
3016               the post-processed text.  If the delimiter is "/", one cannot
3017               get the combination "\/" into the result of this step.  "/"
3018               will finish the regular expression, "\/" will be stripped to
3019               "/" on the previous step, and "\\/" will be left as is.
3020               Because "/" is equivalent to "\/" inside a regular expression,
3021               this does not matter unless the delimiter happens to be
3022               character special to the RE engine, such as in "s*foo*bar*",
3023               "m[foo]", or "m?foo?"; or an alphanumeric char, as in:
3024
3025                 m m ^ a \s* b mmx;
3026
3027               In the RE above, which is intentionally obfuscated for
3028               illustration, the delimiter is "m", the modifier is "mx", and
3029               after delimiter-removal the RE is the same as for
3030               "m/ ^ a \s* b /mx".  There's more than one reason you're
3031               encouraged to restrict your delimiters to non-alphanumeric,
3032               non-whitespace choices.
3033
3034           This step is the last one for all constructs except regular
3035           expressions, which are processed further.
3036
3037       parsing regular expressions
3038           Previous steps were performed during the compilation of Perl code,
3039           but this one happens at run time, although it may be optimized to
3040           be calculated at compile time if appropriate.  After preprocessing
3041           described above, and possibly after evaluation if concatenation,
3042           joining, casing translation, or metaquoting are involved, the
3043           resulting string is passed to the RE engine for compilation.
3044
3045           Whatever happens in the RE engine might be better discussed in
3046           perlre, but for the sake of continuity, we shall do so here.
3047
3048           This is another step where the presence of the "/x" modifier is
3049           relevant.  The RE engine scans the string from left to right and
3050           converts it into a finite automaton.
3051
3052           Backslashed characters are either replaced with corresponding
3053           literal strings (as with "\{"), or else they generate special nodes
3054           in the finite automaton (as with "\b").  Characters special to the
3055           RE engine (such as "|") generate corresponding nodes or groups of
3056           nodes.  "(?#...)" comments are ignored.  All the rest is either
3057           converted to literal strings to match, or else is ignored (as is
3058           whitespace and "#"-style comments if "/x" is present).
3059
3060           Parsing of the bracketed character class construct, "[...]", is
3061           rather different than the rule used for the rest of the pattern.
3062           The terminator of this construct is found using the same rules as
3063           for finding the terminator of a "{}"-delimited construct, the only
3064           exception being that "]" immediately following "[" is treated as
3065           though preceded by a backslash.
3066
3067           The terminator of runtime "(?{...})" is found by temporarily
3068           switching control to the perl parser, which should stop at the
3069           point where the logically balancing terminating "}" is found.
3070
3071           It is possible to inspect both the string given to RE engine and
3072           the resulting finite automaton.  See the arguments
3073           "debug"/"debugcolor" in the "use re" pragma, as well as Perl's -Dr
3074           command-line switch documented in "Command Switches" in perlrun.
3075
3076       Optimization of regular expressions
3077           This step is listed for completeness only.  Since it does not
3078           change semantics, details of this step are not documented and are
3079           subject to change without notice.  This step is performed over the
3080           finite automaton that was generated during the previous pass.
3081
3082           It is at this stage that "split()" silently optimizes "/^/" to mean
3083           "/^/m".
3084
3085   I/O Operators
3086       There are several I/O operators you should know about.
3087
3088       A string enclosed by backticks (grave accents) first undergoes double-
3089       quote interpolation.  It is then interpreted as an external command,
3090       and the output of that command is the value of the backtick string,
3091       like in a shell.  In scalar context, a single string consisting of all
3092       output is returned.  In list context, a list of values is returned, one
3093       per line of output.  (You can set $/ to use a different line
3094       terminator.)  The command is executed each time the pseudo-literal is
3095       evaluated.  The status value of the command is returned in $? (see
3096       perlvar for the interpretation of $?).  Unlike in csh, no translation
3097       is done on the return data--newlines remain newlines.  Unlike in any of
3098       the shells, single quotes do not hide variable names in the command
3099       from interpretation.  To pass a literal dollar-sign through to the
3100       shell you need to hide it with a backslash.  The generalized form of
3101       backticks is "qx//", or you can call the "readpipe" in perlfunc
3102       function.  (Because backticks always undergo shell expansion as well,
3103       see perlsec for security concerns.)
3104
3105       In scalar context, evaluating a filehandle in angle brackets yields the
3106       next line from that file (the newline, if any, included), or "undef" at
3107       end-of-file or on error.  When $/ is set to "undef" (sometimes known as
3108       file-slurp mode) and the file is empty, it returns '' the first time,
3109       followed by "undef" subsequently.
3110
3111       Ordinarily you must assign the returned value to a variable, but there
3112       is one situation where an automatic assignment happens.  If and only if
3113       the input symbol is the only thing inside the conditional of a "while"
3114       statement (even if disguised as a "for(;;)" loop), the value is
3115       automatically assigned to the global variable $_, destroying whatever
3116       was there previously.  (This may seem like an odd thing to you, but
3117       you'll use the construct in almost every Perl script you write.)  The
3118       $_ variable is not implicitly localized.  You'll have to put a
3119       "local $_;" before the loop if you want that to happen.  Furthermore,
3120       if the input symbol or an explicit assignment of the input symbol to a
3121       scalar is used as a "while"/"for" condition, then the condition
3122       actually tests for definedness of the expression's value, not for its
3123       regular truth value.
3124
3125       Thus the following lines are equivalent:
3126
3127           while (defined($_ = <STDIN>)) { print; }
3128           while ($_ = <STDIN>) { print; }
3129           while (<STDIN>) { print; }
3130           for (;<STDIN>;) { print; }
3131           print while defined($_ = <STDIN>);
3132           print while ($_ = <STDIN>);
3133           print while <STDIN>;
3134
3135       This also behaves similarly, but assigns to a lexical variable instead
3136       of to $_:
3137
3138           while (my $line = <STDIN>) { print $line }
3139
3140       In these loop constructs, the assigned value (whether assignment is
3141       automatic or explicit) is then tested to see whether it is defined.
3142       The defined test avoids problems where the line has a string value that
3143       would be treated as false by Perl; for example a "" or a "0" with no
3144       trailing newline.  If you really mean for such values to terminate the
3145       loop, they should be tested for explicitly:
3146
3147           while (($_ = <STDIN>) ne '0') { ... }
3148           while (<STDIN>) { last unless $_; ... }
3149
3150       In other boolean contexts, "<FILEHANDLE>" without an explicit "defined"
3151       test or comparison elicits a warning if the "use warnings" pragma or
3152       the -w command-line switch (the $^W variable) is in effect.
3153
3154       The filehandles STDIN, STDOUT, and STDERR are predefined.  (The
3155       filehandles "stdin", "stdout", and "stderr" will also work except in
3156       packages, where they would be interpreted as local identifiers rather
3157       than global.)  Additional filehandles may be created with the "open()"
3158       function, amongst others.  See perlopentut and "open" in perlfunc for
3159       details on this.
3160
3161       If a "<FILEHANDLE>" is used in a context that is looking for a list, a
3162       list comprising all input lines is returned, one line per list element.
3163       It's easy to grow to a rather large data space this way, so use with
3164       care.
3165
3166       "<FILEHANDLE>"  may also be spelled "readline(*FILEHANDLE)".  See
3167       "readline" in perlfunc.
3168
3169       The null filehandle "<>" (sometimes called the diamond operator) is
3170       special: it can be used to emulate the behavior of sed and awk, and any
3171       other Unix filter program that takes a list of filenames, doing the
3172       same to each line of input from all of them.  Input from "<>" comes
3173       either from standard input, or from each file listed on the command
3174       line.  Here's how it works: the first time "<>" is evaluated, the @ARGV
3175       array is checked, and if it is empty, $ARGV[0] is set to "-", which
3176       when opened gives you standard input.  The @ARGV array is then
3177       processed as a list of filenames.  The loop
3178
3179           while (<>) {
3180               ...                     # code for each line
3181           }
3182
3183       is equivalent to the following Perl-like pseudo code:
3184
3185           unshift(@ARGV, '-') unless @ARGV;
3186           while ($ARGV = shift) {
3187               open(ARGV, $ARGV);
3188               while (<ARGV>) {
3189                   ...         # code for each line
3190               }
3191           }
3192
3193       except that it isn't so cumbersome to say, and will actually work.  It
3194       really does shift the @ARGV array and put the current filename into the
3195       $ARGV variable.  It also uses filehandle ARGV internally.  "<>" is just
3196       a synonym for "<ARGV>", which is magical.  (The pseudo code above
3197       doesn't work because it treats "<ARGV>" as non-magical.)
3198
3199       Since the null filehandle uses the two argument form of "open" in
3200       perlfunc it interprets special characters, so if you have a script like
3201       this:
3202
3203           while (<>) {
3204               print;
3205           }
3206
3207       and call it with "perl dangerous.pl 'rm -rfv *|'", it actually opens a
3208       pipe, executes the "rm" command and reads "rm"'s output from that pipe.
3209       If you want all items in @ARGV to be interpreted as file names, you can
3210       use the module "ARGV::readonly" from CPAN, or use the double diamond
3211       bracket:
3212
3213           while (<<>>) {
3214               print;
3215           }
3216
3217       Using double angle brackets inside of a while causes the open to use
3218       the three argument form (with the second argument being "<"), so all
3219       arguments in "ARGV" are treated as literal filenames (including "-").
3220       (Note that for convenience, if you use "<<>>" and if @ARGV is empty, it
3221       will still read from the standard input.)
3222
3223       You can modify @ARGV before the first "<>" as long as the array ends up
3224       containing the list of filenames you really want.  Line numbers ($.)
3225       continue as though the input were one big happy file.  See the example
3226       in "eof" in perlfunc for how to reset line numbers on each file.
3227
3228       If you want to set @ARGV to your own list of files, go right ahead.
3229       This sets @ARGV to all plain text files if no @ARGV was given:
3230
3231           @ARGV = grep { -f && -T } glob('*') unless @ARGV;
3232
3233       You can even set them to pipe commands.  For example, this
3234       automatically filters compressed arguments through gzip:
3235
3236           @ARGV = map { /\.(gz|Z)$/ ? "gzip -dc < $_ |" : $_ } @ARGV;
3237
3238       If you want to pass switches into your script, you can use one of the
3239       "Getopts" modules or put a loop on the front like this:
3240
3241           while ($_ = $ARGV[0], /^-/) {
3242               shift;
3243               last if /^--$/;
3244               if (/^-D(.*)/) { $debug = $1 }
3245               if (/^-v/)     { $verbose++  }
3246               # ...           # other switches
3247           }
3248
3249           while (<>) {
3250               # ...           # code for each line
3251           }
3252
3253       The "<>" symbol will return "undef" for end-of-file only once.  If you
3254       call it again after this, it will assume you are processing another
3255       @ARGV list, and if you haven't set @ARGV, will read input from STDIN.
3256
3257       If what the angle brackets contain is a simple scalar variable (for
3258       example, $foo), then that variable contains the name of the filehandle
3259       to input from, or its typeglob, or a reference to the same.  For
3260       example:
3261
3262           $fh = \*STDIN;
3263           $line = <$fh>;
3264
3265       If what's within the angle brackets is neither a filehandle nor a
3266       simple scalar variable containing a filehandle name, typeglob, or
3267       typeglob reference, it is interpreted as a filename pattern to be
3268       globbed, and either a list of filenames or the next filename in the
3269       list is returned, depending on context.  This distinction is determined
3270       on syntactic grounds alone.  That means "<$x>" is always a "readline()"
3271       from an indirect handle, but "<$hash{key}>" is always a "glob()".
3272       That's because $x is a simple scalar variable, but $hash{key} is
3273       not--it's a hash element.  Even "<$x >" (note the extra space) is
3274       treated as "glob("$x ")", not "readline($x)".
3275
3276       One level of double-quote interpretation is done first, but you can't
3277       say "<$foo>" because that's an indirect filehandle as explained in the
3278       previous paragraph.  (In older versions of Perl, programmers would
3279       insert curly brackets to force interpretation as a filename glob:
3280       "<${foo}>".  These days, it's considered cleaner to call the internal
3281       function directly as "glob($foo)", which is probably the right way to
3282       have done it in the first place.)  For example:
3283
3284           while (<*.c>) {
3285               chmod 0644, $_;
3286           }
3287
3288       is roughly equivalent to:
3289
3290           open(FOO, "echo *.c | tr -s ' \t\r\f' '\\012\\012\\012\\012'|");
3291           while (<FOO>) {
3292               chomp;
3293               chmod 0644, $_;
3294           }
3295
3296       except that the globbing is actually done internally using the standard
3297       "File::Glob" extension.  Of course, the shortest way to do the above
3298       is:
3299
3300           chmod 0644, <*.c>;
3301
3302       A (file)glob evaluates its (embedded) argument only when it is starting
3303       a new list.  All values must be read before it will start over.  In
3304       list context, this isn't important because you automatically get them
3305       all anyway.  However, in scalar context the operator returns the next
3306       value each time it's called, or "undef" when the list has run out.  As
3307       with filehandle reads, an automatic "defined" is generated when the
3308       glob occurs in the test part of a "while", because legal glob returns
3309       (for example, a file called 0) would otherwise terminate the loop.
3310       Again, "undef" is returned only once.  So if you're expecting a single
3311       value from a glob, it is much better to say
3312
3313           ($file) = <blurch*>;
3314
3315       than
3316
3317           $file = <blurch*>;
3318
3319       because the latter will alternate between returning a filename and
3320       returning false.
3321
3322       If you're trying to do variable interpolation, it's definitely better
3323       to use the "glob()" function, because the older notation can cause
3324       people to become confused with the indirect filehandle notation.
3325
3326           @files = glob("$dir/*.[ch]");
3327           @files = glob($files[$i]);
3328
3329       If an angle-bracket-based globbing expression is used as the condition
3330       of a "while" or "for" loop, then it will be implicitly assigned to $_.
3331       If either a globbing expression or an explicit assignment of a globbing
3332       expression to a scalar is used as a "while"/"for" condition, then the
3333       condition actually tests for definedness of the expression's value, not
3334       for its regular truth value.
3335
3336   Constant Folding
3337       Like C, Perl does a certain amount of expression evaluation at compile
3338       time whenever it determines that all arguments to an operator are
3339       static and have no side effects.  In particular, string concatenation
3340       happens at compile time between literals that don't do variable
3341       substitution.  Backslash interpolation also happens at compile time.
3342       You can say
3343
3344             'Now is the time for all'
3345           . "\n"
3346           .  'good men to come to.'
3347
3348       and this all reduces to one string internally.  Likewise, if you say
3349
3350           foreach $file (@filenames) {
3351               if (-s $file > 5 + 100 * 2**16) {  }
3352           }
3353
3354       the compiler precomputes the number which that expression represents so
3355       that the interpreter won't have to.
3356
3357   No-ops
3358       Perl doesn't officially have a no-op operator, but the bare constants 0
3359       and 1 are special-cased not to produce a warning in void context, so
3360       you can for example safely do
3361
3362           1 while foo();
3363
3364   Bitwise String Operators
3365       Bitstrings of any size may be manipulated by the bitwise operators ("~
3366       | & ^").
3367
3368       If the operands to a binary bitwise op are strings of different sizes,
3369       | and ^ ops act as though the shorter operand had additional zero bits
3370       on the right, while the & op acts as though the longer operand were
3371       truncated to the length of the shorter.  The granularity for such
3372       extension or truncation is one or more bytes.
3373
3374           # ASCII-based examples
3375           print "j p \n" ^ " a h";            # prints "JAPH\n"
3376           print "JA" | "  ph\n";              # prints "japh\n"
3377           print "japh\nJunk" & '_____';       # prints "JAPH\n";
3378           print 'p N$' ^ " E<H\n";            # prints "Perl\n";
3379
3380       If you are intending to manipulate bitstrings, be certain that you're
3381       supplying bitstrings: If an operand is a number, that will imply a
3382       numeric bitwise operation.  You may explicitly show which type of
3383       operation you intend by using "" or "0+", as in the examples below.
3384
3385           $foo =  150  |  105;        # yields 255  (0x96 | 0x69 is 0xFF)
3386           $foo = '150' |  105;        # yields 255
3387           $foo =  150  | '105';       # yields 255
3388           $foo = '150' | '105';       # yields string '155' (under ASCII)
3389
3390           $baz = 0+$foo & 0+$bar;     # both ops explicitly numeric
3391           $biz = "$foo" ^ "$bar";     # both ops explicitly stringy
3392
3393       This somewhat unpredictable behavior can be avoided with the "bitwise"
3394       feature, new in Perl 5.22.  You can enable it via
3395       "use feature 'bitwise'" or "use v5.28".  Before Perl 5.28, it used to
3396       emit a warning in the "experimental::bitwise" category.  Under this
3397       feature, the four standard bitwise operators ("~ | & ^") are always
3398       numeric.  Adding a dot after each operator ("~. |. &. ^.") forces it to
3399       treat its operands as strings:
3400
3401           use feature "bitwise";
3402           $foo =  150  |  105;        # yields 255  (0x96 | 0x69 is 0xFF)
3403           $foo = '150' |  105;        # yields 255
3404           $foo =  150  | '105';       # yields 255
3405           $foo = '150' | '105';       # yields 255
3406           $foo =  150  |. 105;        # yields string '155'
3407           $foo = '150' |. 105;        # yields string '155'
3408           $foo =  150  |.'105';       # yields string '155'
3409           $foo = '150' |.'105';       # yields string '155'
3410
3411           $baz = $foo &  $bar;        # both operands numeric
3412           $biz = $foo ^. $bar;        # both operands stringy
3413
3414       The assignment variants of these operators ("&= |= ^= &.= |.= ^.=")
3415       behave likewise under the feature.
3416
3417       It is a fatal error if an operand contains a character whose ordinal
3418       value is above 0xFF, and hence not expressible except in UTF-8.  The
3419       operation is performed on a non-UTF-8 copy for other operands encoded
3420       in UTF-8.  See "Byte and Character Semantics" in perlunicode.
3421
3422       See "vec" in perlfunc for information on how to manipulate individual
3423       bits in a bit vector.
3424
3425   Integer Arithmetic
3426       By default, Perl assumes that it must do most of its arithmetic in
3427       floating point.  But by saying
3428
3429           use integer;
3430
3431       you may tell the compiler to use integer operations (see integer for a
3432       detailed explanation) from here to the end of the enclosing BLOCK.  An
3433       inner BLOCK may countermand this by saying
3434
3435           no integer;
3436
3437       which lasts until the end of that BLOCK.  Note that this doesn't mean
3438       everything is an integer, merely that Perl will use integer operations
3439       for arithmetic, comparison, and bitwise operators.  For example, even
3440       under "use integer", if you take the sqrt(2), you'll still get
3441       1.4142135623731 or so.
3442
3443       Used on numbers, the bitwise operators ("&" "|" "^" "~" "<<" ">>")
3444       always produce integral results.  (But see also "Bitwise String
3445       Operators".)  However, "use integer" still has meaning for them.  By
3446       default, their results are interpreted as unsigned integers, but if
3447       "use integer" is in effect, their results are interpreted as signed
3448       integers.  For example, "~0" usually evaluates to a large integral
3449       value.  However, "use integer; ~0" is "-1" on two's-complement
3450       machines.
3451
3452   Floating-point Arithmetic
3453       While "use integer" provides integer-only arithmetic, there is no
3454       analogous mechanism to provide automatic rounding or truncation to a
3455       certain number of decimal places.  For rounding to a certain number of
3456       digits, "sprintf()" or "printf()" is usually the easiest route.  See
3457       perlfaq4.
3458
3459       Floating-point numbers are only approximations to what a mathematician
3460       would call real numbers.  There are infinitely more reals than floats,
3461       so some corners must be cut.  For example:
3462
3463           printf "%.20g\n", 123456789123456789;
3464           #        produces 123456789123456784
3465
3466       Testing for exact floating-point equality or inequality is not a good
3467       idea.  Here's a (relatively expensive) work-around to compare whether
3468       two floating-point numbers are equal to a particular number of decimal
3469       places.  See Knuth, volume II, for a more robust treatment of this
3470       topic.
3471
3472           sub fp_equal {
3473               my ($X, $Y, $POINTS) = @_;
3474               my ($tX, $tY);
3475               $tX = sprintf("%.${POINTS}g", $X);
3476               $tY = sprintf("%.${POINTS}g", $Y);
3477               return $tX eq $tY;
3478           }
3479
3480       The POSIX module (part of the standard perl distribution) implements
3481       "ceil()", "floor()", and other mathematical and trigonometric
3482       functions.  The "Math::Complex" module (part of the standard perl
3483       distribution) defines mathematical functions that work on both the
3484       reals and the imaginary numbers.  "Math::Complex" is not as efficient
3485       as POSIX, but POSIX can't work with complex numbers.
3486
3487       Rounding in financial applications can have serious implications, and
3488       the rounding method used should be specified precisely.  In these
3489       cases, it probably pays not to trust whichever system rounding is being
3490       used by Perl, but to instead implement the rounding function you need
3491       yourself.
3492
3493   Bigger Numbers
3494       The standard "Math::BigInt", "Math::BigRat", and "Math::BigFloat"
3495       modules, along with the "bignum", "bigint", and "bigrat" pragmas,
3496       provide variable-precision arithmetic and overloaded operators,
3497       although they're currently pretty slow.  At the cost of some space and
3498       considerable speed, they avoid the normal pitfalls associated with
3499       limited-precision representations.
3500
3501               use 5.010;
3502               use bigint;  # easy interface to Math::BigInt
3503               $x = 123456789123456789;
3504               say $x * $x;
3505           +15241578780673678515622620750190521
3506
3507       Or with rationals:
3508
3509               use 5.010;
3510               use bigrat;
3511               $x = 3/22;
3512               $y = 4/6;
3513               say "x/y is ", $x/$y;
3514               say "x*y is ", $x*$y;
3515               x/y is 9/44
3516               x*y is 1/11
3517
3518       Several modules let you calculate with unlimited or fixed precision
3519       (bound only by memory and CPU time).  There are also some non-standard
3520       modules that provide faster implementations via external C libraries.
3521
3522       Here is a short, but incomplete summary:
3523
3524         Math::String           treat string sequences like numbers
3525         Math::FixedPrecision   calculate with a fixed precision
3526         Math::Currency         for currency calculations
3527         Bit::Vector            manipulate bit vectors fast (uses C)
3528         Math::BigIntFast       Bit::Vector wrapper for big numbers
3529         Math::Pari             provides access to the Pari C library
3530         Math::Cephes           uses the external Cephes C library (no
3531                                big numbers)
3532         Math::Cephes::Fraction fractions via the Cephes library
3533         Math::GMP              another one using an external C library
3534         Math::GMPz             an alternative interface to libgmp's big ints
3535         Math::GMPq             an interface to libgmp's fraction numbers
3536         Math::GMPf             an interface to libgmp's floating point numbers
3537
3538       Choose wisely.
3539
3540
3541
3542perl v5.34.0                      2021-10-18                         PERLOP(1)
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