I've always interpreted it like this. Since the documentation says it's localized to the current scope -- and not that it's localized upon a match -- then it's the same variable in the whole block. My Perl interpretation of this is:
{ # localize the variables # the block }
E.g.
{ local ($1, $2) = ($1, $2); # OK, so you can't actually write this. # The hacky can write local (*1, *2) = \($1, $2); instead. # Your loop: foreach my $symbol (@syms){ local $test; $symbol=~m/(\w+)\.(\d+)/; print "symbol: $symbol\t\$1: $1\t\$2:$2\n"; print "test is ",$test++,"\n"; my ($ts,$te) = ($1,$2); } }
Cheers,
-Anomo

In reply to Re: Regex Capturing: Is this a bug or a feature? by Anonymous Monk
in thread Regex Capturing: Is this a bug or a feature? by shotgunefx

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