You don't say one way or the other, but I'm assuming you did not have warnings enabled in your code. Had you done so, Perl would have given you another clue as to what was going on.

c:\@Work\Perl\monks>perl -Mstrict -le "use warnings; use Data::Dumper; warn Dumper( { a => 'a' =~ m/b/, b => 'asdf' } ); " Odd number of elements in anonymous hash at -e line 1. $VAR1 = { 'a' => 'b', 'asdf' => undef };
The "Odd number of elements in anonymous hash ..." warning can be explained as follows:
As haukex has explained, the expression
    { a => 'a' =~ m/b/,  b => 'asdf' }
evaluates to
    { 'a', (empty list), 'b', 'asdf' }
which flattens to
    { 'a', 'b', 'asdf' }
which gives you the perplexing hash structure.

Bottom line: always use strict and warnings (if you weren't doing so already), even when you know you don't really need them! :)


Give a man a fish:  <%-{-{-{-<


In reply to Re: What does a failed regular expression match actually return? by AnomalousMonk
in thread What does a failed regular expression match actually return? by Anonymous Monk

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