CGI::Carp is not a substitute for
perl -c
(or whatever the equivalent is for Win32).
[that would be perl -c ... thanks Enlil ;) ]
It is intended for redirecting warnings and run-time errors,
but not
syntax errors [ UPDATE - this is simply
wrong ... CGI::Carp is intended to handle syntax/compile time errors. Looks like this may be a bug introduced in
version 1.24. See
below ]
use strict;
use warnings;
use CGI::Carp qw(fatalsToBrowser warningsToBrowser);
warningsToBrowser(1);
if(my $foo == 'bar') { die "yes"; }
You
could wrap the code in question in an
eval block, but it's easier to test the syntax on a
command line.
jeffa
L-LL-L--L-LL-L--L-LL-L--
-R--R-RR-R--R-RR-R--R-RR
B--B--B--B--B--B--B--B--
H---H---H---H---H---H---
(the triplet paradiddle with high-hat)
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