I was skeptical about this warning, and a simple experiment shows that it is not accurate:
DB<1> $x = '???\E???'
DB<2> p "\Q$x"
\?\?\?\\E\?\?\?
DB<3>
A \Q cannot be ended by a \E in an interpolated string. And, using
B::Deparse's -q option in 5.6, we can see why:
~> perl -MO=Deparse,-q -e '$x = q{?\E?}; $y = "a\Q$x\Eb"; print "$y\n"
+'
$x = '?\\E?';
$y = quotemeta $x;
print $y . "\n";
-e syntax OK
This shows that \Q\E inside a double-quoted string is actually compiled as concatenation and quotemeta. The value of $x at runtime won't change the scope of the quotemeta().
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