The expression "\$$_" is evaluated like a little Perl
program and returns a value. In your case, that value
seems to be a reference (an object, in fact); the insert
method is then invoked on that object.
Personally, I wouldn't really recommend doing things like
this unless you're really sure what you're doing.
You're basically using symbolic references, since
you can also do the same thing w/o the eval. For example:
$foo = "bar";
$_ = "foo";
print $$_;
This prints "bar".
A better option might be to create a hash of objects,
if at all possible. But that's just my opinion.
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