Understood LanX, on Windows, $/ is set to \r\n by default. I've found that on Windows, you can strip \r and be left with an \n (which is expected). I'm curious to know how, where and why this is compiled in. What's the trigger, and are there other *common* possibilities other than \r\n and \n.
In reply to Re^2: How many defaults of $/ does perl have?
by stevieb
in thread How many defaults of $/ does perl have?
by stevieb
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