"Hence you'll need to fake-export them too. ;)"
Yes, I was aware of that and even considered doing it. The main criteria, when thinking about doing that, were: how long that would take; how long disaster recovery would take; and, what useful coding I would not be doing while doing this instead.
I tend not to make too many mistakes. Mostly they involve keyboard errors: not pressing or releasing the shift key fast enough; hitting an adjacent key by mistake; and the like. E.g.
my @x = qw{a b c}: # slow release of shift: got ':' instead of ';' my $y - $x[2]; # hit adjacent key: got '-' instead of '='
Thankfully these are pretty rare and easily fixed.
Other types of errors, such as logic errors, are not syntax errors and are only found when testing.
— Ken
In reply to Re^3: Perl syntax checking without `perl -c` (bareword)
by kcott
in thread Perl syntax checking without `perl -c`
by kcott
For: | Use: | ||
& | & | ||
< | < | ||
> | > | ||
[ | [ | ||
] | ] |