\t and \n are only interpreted as tabs and newlines in double-quoted text:
$nl = "\n"; # newline
$nl = '\n'; # backslash n
$nl = qq(\n); # newline
$nl = q(\n); # backslash n
Basically, this means that your literal text is either quoted wrong (if it's a literal string in your code) or it has a literal \n (not a newline) in the text (if you're reading it from a file / somewhere else).
see also Quote and Quote-like Operators in the perlop manpage.
update:
If you *really* want to interpret all \n as newline and \t as tabs from your input, you can do something like this:
for (@input) {
s/\\n/\n/g; # replace \n with newline
s/\\t/\t/g; # replace \t with tab
}
Note: this doesn't take quoting into account (\\n will be \ followed by a newline)
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