If you mean the parens in the regex, you don't need them using the other way, either.
/PAT/g in list context, will imply parens around the whole match, if none are provided in the pattern.
$count = () = $teststring =~ /test/g;
will just work fine.
This is documented in perlop, see the last sentence in this paragraph:
The "/g" modifier specifies global pattern matching--that is,
matching as many times as possible within the string. How it
behaves depends on the context. In list context, it returns a
list of the substrings matched by any capturing parentheses in
the regular expression. If there are no parentheses, it returns
a list of all the matched strings, as if there were parentheses
around the whole pattern.
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