Well, they're more special than "the variables sort() happens to use". To achieve that handy usage without warnings, Perl exempts $a and $b from declaration checks under strict vars. That means that
perl -we'use strict; $a = 5; print $a'
compiles and runs without errors, while
perl -we'use strict; $c = 5; print $c'
won't even compile.
This has bitten me in real life when trying to cut down a test case for closure scoping behavior. My real code was doing different things than my one-liners, and there was NO DIFFERENCE except the variable names. I was tearing my hair out.
$a and $b are naturals for quick throwaway code; the documentation uses them in examples all over the place. However, $c and $d are much better choices. I find myself completely avoiding $a and $b outside of sort(), just to be on the safe side.
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