In the first case, the knowledge of the left-hand side used in evaluating the right-hand side is purely an optimisation--effectively, extended context--which doesn't change the semantic outcome of the statement.
quibble: it does change the semantic outcome. The game is judged to be worth the candle, though. Example:
use Data::Dumper; my ($a,$b,@a); ($a,$b) = split / /, "a "; print Dumper $a,$b; ($a,$b) = @a = split / /, "a "; print Dumper $a,$b;
Without the optimization, the default removal of trailing empty fields leaves $b undefined.

In reply to Re^5: re-key a hash (not so clear) by ysth
in thread re-key a hash by Anonymous Monk

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