That was interesting,

It turns out that B::Deparse was putting in "\n"s into the string that was declared at the top of It Came From the Crypt. It then thought that everything would be alright if it changed the next substitution to get rid of them, except that it wasn't. If you run B::Deparse and shove the contents into a file, then to run that you need to modify the first substitution so that it does nothing to the poor "\n"s.

#change this: $u=$q=~s/\n\s//xg && -2; #to this $u=$q=~s/\s//xg && -2;
That seems to do it for me at least (running perl 5.6 on a redhat box). Anyone else? Also, why does Perl insert the carriage returns and then change a regex to deal with it? That seems odd...

jynx


In reply to Re: Re: Regarding B::Deparse by jynx
in thread Regarding B::Deparse by demerphq

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