Of course, you are probably right, but why did this work?
% perl -le 'print for a .. z' | perl -nle 'if (/d/ .. /h/) { next unless "m//"; print }'
d
e
f
g
h
Is that just interpolation at work? Do we have to read the source code to understand what is going on here, or is supposed to be going on? Talk about ambiguity... I tried //; m//; and "m//;" on that Foy code I reported and none yielded a successful match. Every example reported:
No nothing
$1:
$2:
$3:
$&: Perl
the value from the previous successful match.
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