As others have pointed out, you're assigning the contents of @_ to the hash. @_ happens to contain just a hash reference.
Now what can you do about this? In all but pathological cases, you won't be using hash-references as hash-keys, so you can do the following: (beautification left as an excercise to the reader)
sub describe {
my %person;
if (@_ and ref($_[0]) eq 'HASH') {
%person = %{+shift};
}
%person = @_;
...
}
This "flattens" the first argument of the sub if it is a hash reference. Thus, if you call describe( { some=>'args' }, more => 'of_them' ), you'll get %person=(some=>'args',more=>'of_them');
Please note that the ordinary arguments overwrite those of the flattened hash in case of matching keys.
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