... And a handy precedence list can be found in perlcheat.

I have a question about precedence of my. Isn't it a 'named uop', as I thought, or is it absent from precedent list? E.g.
perl -wle 'print( my $i ** 2 )' #Use of uninitialized value $i in exponentiation (**) at -e line 1. #0
perl -wle 'print( my ( $i ** 2 ) )' #Can't declare exponentiation (**) in "my" at -e line 1, near ") ) #" #Execution of -e aborted due to compilation errors.
It looks that precedence of 'my' is higher than usual 'named uops'.

In reply to Re^3: Confused by a couple of idioms by rsFalse
in thread Confused by a couple of idioms by nysus

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