But that's only one example. It's not just / (divide or regex). It's also dot (concatenate or decimal point), less-than (less than or filehandle read), two less-thans (left shift or
here-doc), star (glob or multiply), percent (hash or modulus), ampersand (subroutine or bit-wise and), and question mark (regex or question-colon).
If you aren't handling all of those, you aren't parsing Perl!
Put another way, you cannot tokenize Perl without at all times knowing whether
you are expecting a value or an operator, because all of the ones I just listed
have double duty, depending on context. And yet, to know that, you also need to know
if you have a prototyped function to the left that takes args or not. What a mess!
-- Randal L. Schwartz, Perl hacker
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