Perl is not C. Though I occasionally use sprintf in Perl, I rarely use printf, whose doco warns:
Don't fall into the trap of using a printf when a simple print would do. The print is more efficient and less error prone.
Hope the following test program clarifies:
use strict;
use warnings;
my $ca = 'A';
print "$ca\n"; # outputs A
printf "%s\n", $ca; # outputs A
printf "%c\n", ord($ca); # outputs A
printf "%x\n", ord($ca); # outputs 41
printf "%d\n", ord($ca); # outputs 65
See also: ord, chr, hex, oct, sprintf
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