Perl has an odd feature that you can next out of a block from within a subroutine. Ie:

sub mynext { next } for (1..10) { mynext(); print $_; }

This usage will warn as its a form of action at a distance, but it is legal and can be useful*. Thus you could put some caller-fu in mynext() and have it warn where it was called. This would require temporarily s/next/mynext()/g of course so IMO its not a route to be taken lightly. OTOH if its this type of stuff that is causing your problem in the first place then warnings will reveal all. You didnt show any code so its hard to say. :-)

* An interesting example is its usage in the Test framework for handling SKIP blocks

---
$world=~s/war/peace/g


In reply to Re^3: Continue block entry by demerphq
in thread Continue block entry by prowler

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