Actually using $@ as a boolean is a bug waiting to happen. It relies on the exception being a non-empty non-zero string, and strange interactions between object destructors can sometimes break that assumption.

A safer pattern is

unless (eval { ...; 1 }) { ... # handle the error in $@ }
or for simpler cases,
eval { ...; 1 } or return undef; return undef unless eval { ...; 1 };
Eval is guaranteed to return a false value on an exception, so you ensure your expression ends with a true value, and now you aren't at the mercy of the exception text/object.

In reply to Re: Catching error in DateTime::Format by NERDVANA
in thread Catching error in DateTime::Format by Anonymous Monk

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