'die' spews to STDERR.
Since outputs are to different devices, the order may be intermingled - usually, STDERR output appears first.
You could get your expected output by using 'warn' instead of 'say' (and adding "\n").
Memory fault -- brain fried
In reply to Re: Moo-Type checking example from Perl Maven: What should be the expected result?
by NetWallah
in thread Moo-Type checking example from Perl Maven: What should be the expected result?
by Perl300
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