Without the parens, the first 'rand' is taken as a string; and that causes the parser to see { 'rand' => rand } as an anomymous hash.

With the parens, it parses { rand() => rand } as an anonymous block as you intend.

You can also force the parser to see the anonymous block like this: my @x = map {; rand => rand } (0 .. 5);.

The extra semicolon is legal inside an anonymous block, but not in an anonymous hash, so the parser gives the benefit of the doubt and goes the way you intend.


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In reply to Re: what's wrong with that syntax construction? by BrowserUk
in thread what's wrong with that syntax construction? by basiliscos

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