I think it should keep .*? as .*? on the theory that the actual underlying abstraction is "longest/shortest", not "earliest/latest".

I think code assertions can still work unless they make assumptions like "$1 is always bound before $2". (And I don't think we should reverse $1 and $2 for them. Reversing a lexical scope would be evil.)

But basically, I don't know what the limits are yet. All I know is that Perl 5 sets them too tight, and we can push them out a little. Rule matching can be more powerful than a locomotive, but there will always be a bit of kryptonite in the world. Language designers tend to concentrate on the locomotive rather than the kryptonite.


In reply to Re^2: What does it mean that a "pattern cannot be reversed?" by TimToady
in thread What does it mean that a "pattern cannot be reversed?" by tphyahoo

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