I see.
So, with global variables, like in
$a = 2; sub f { print $a; } { local $a = 5; f; }'
or
$a = 2; sub f { print $a; } for $a (5) { f; }
we get 5 as the result, as perl localizes $a dynamically.
However, if you put my before $a,
perl can not localize the variable dynamically.
In the first case, local raises an error, as
Larry knows Perl can't localize a my, so
he explicitly denied it.
In the second case, however, if you put my
before $a in the beginning, for will
not carp (that would be a too bad restriction),
but instead localizes $a in the wrong way.
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