Debugging some ancient code at my company, I came across the following lines inside cgi-lib.cgi (remember that old staple, by Steven E. Brenner?):
$cgi_lib'bufsize = 8192; # default buffer size when reading multi
+part
$cgi_lib'maxbound = 100; # maximum boundary length to be encounte
+rd
$cgi_lib'headerout = 0; # indicates whether the header has been
+printed
I've never seen variable names with a single quote in them before, so I wrote a very simple test.
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
my $asdf'a = 'hi';
print $asdf'a;
When I ran it, I got the following error (regardless of my strict or warnings settings):
"my" variable $asdf::a can't be in a package near "my $asdf'a "
Can anyone explain what's going on here? It appears that a single-quote can be used in place of :: to declare namespace for variables, but I've never seen or heard of such thing before now. I assume it's a relic from an older Perl version that's now deprecated.
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