There is no general automatism to set $_ like your example implies, that's just magic behavior of the file iterator <> in scalar context.

Um, not quite, thats part of the magic of while not readline

$ perl -MO=Deparse,-p -le "while(<>){print}" BEGIN { $/ = "\n"; $\ = "\n"; } while (defined(($_ = <ARGV>))) { print($_); } -e syntax OK $ perl -MO=Deparse,-p -le "while($f=<>){print}" BEGIN { $/ = "\n"; $\ = "\n"; } while (defined(($f = <ARGV>))) { print($_); } -e syntax OK $ echo hi |perl -le "while($f=<>){print}"
You see  <> in scalar context didn't set $_

In reply to Re^2: Internally, how do for() and while() differ? by Anonymous Monk
in thread Internally, how do for() and while() differ? by stevieb

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