This made me wonder what if any "new syntax" added to Perl5 since 5.8 has actually become a useful, usable part of the language and not been backed out or hidden behind some obscure set of enablement requirements that mean its too much bother to be bothered with.
Given/when: been and gone; smart matching: decree absolute; autoderef: living on the edge; state:barely used, and flawed; say: a pain to enable; /r: never seen the need.
From my perspective, the only new feature that has earned its place is defined-OR (//).
So, when I read about new ego-driven fads like postfix deref I look back at the recent history and think: Meh! Why bother. It'll probably disappear up its own bum once the ego trip wears off anyway.
In reply to Re: Experimental features: autoderef vs postfix deref
by BrowserUk
in thread Experimental features: autoderef vs postfix deref
by stevieb
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