The code shown will never die here:
$xl_app = CreateObject OLE 'Excel.Application' || die $!;
Your code will never die here. || binds to the constant string 'Excel.Application', not the method call. Here's how perl parses that line (see that there is no 'die' in the parsed code!):
C:\>perl -MO=Deparse,p -MWin32::OLE -e "$xl_app = CreateObject OLE 'Ex
+cel.Applic
ation' || die $!;"
$xl_app = 'OLE'->CreateObject('Excel.Application');
-e syntax OK
Use or in place of ||, or use parens to explicitly show the precedence you want. Now when the code fails, it will die with an appropriate error message.
Note: It would be more idiomatic to write that line the same way perl parses it ( $xl_app = 'OLE'->CreateObject('Excel.Application') ) instead of the function-like way it is written.
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