you probably have two perls installed, so fix your shebang
so however you ran cpan , run it again, then see which perl is running with
cpan[1]> !print $^X,$/;
C:\perl\bin\perl.exe
You can compare to whichever cpan you're running head -n2 `which cpan`
Or run which perl and run perl yourfile which will always use the current perl (first perl in $PATH ), which should be the same as the perl of first cpan in path
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