you aren't printing a newline after the output, which operating systems like linux require.
s/linux/Windows sometimes/ makes that statement correct. Though I've never figured out the details of when the missing newline presents a problem.
I've also seen Unix shells configured with "\r" at the start of their prompts which could hide the fact that the crypted string was output.
- tyeIn reply to Re^3: perl-5.8.0 print statement (win32? \r?)
by tye
in thread perl-5.8.0 print statement
by hhoffman
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