The only difference between or and || is precedence. || has high precedence; or has low precedence.
my @list = func_returning_list() || 'default';
This is parsed as my @list = (func_returning_list() || 'default');, which fails because || forces func_returning_list() into scalar context.
my @list = func_returning_list() or 'default';
This is parsed as (my @list = func_returning_list()) or 'default';, which fails because 'default' is not assigned to @list when func_returning_list() returns an empty list.
Using ?: is the right solution.
In perl6, the logic operators will allow their context to propagate to both their operands, so the first snippet will work as intended.
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