That's how the fat comma works: it turns the word to the left of itself into a string.
$ perl -MO=Deparse,-p -Mstrict -e 'sub b;sub c;(1+b=>c)'
sub b;
use strict;
((1 + 'b'), c());
sub c;
The behaviour can be sometimes surprising, but it's documented in perlop:
The special quoting behavior ignores precedence, and hence may apply to
part of the left operand:
print time.shift => "bbb";
That example prints something like "1314363215shiftbbb", because the =>
implicitly quotes the "shift" immediately on its left, ignoring the fact
that "time.shift" is the entire left operand.
Update: See also Using constants as hash keys.
map{substr$_->[0],$_->[1]||0,1}[\*||{},3],[[]],[ref qr-1,-,-1],[{}],[sub{}^*ARGV,3]
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