OK, I had originally missed that you are defining the sub inside the sprintf arguments (but never actually call the sub), so that sprintf will output a coderef, as in this simpler example:
$ perl -e 'print sprintf( "%s%s",
> "header" . "\n",
> sub { return 3});
> '
header
CODE(0x6000684c8)
Of course, you can solve the problem by
calling the coderef:
$ perl -e 'print sprintf( "%s%s", "header" . "\n", ,sub { return 3}-
+>())'
header
3
as shown by
BrowserUk, but it seems to me that you are looking for complicated ways of achieving simple things.
Why don't you define your sub separately? Or use some other way of merging your data?
Something like that works properly:
$ perl -e 'sub concat { my $str; for ($_[0]..$_[1]) { $str .= $_;} $st
+r;}
> print sprintf "%s\n%s\n", "foo", concat('a', 'e');
> '
foo
abcde
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