The following codes shows that when I attempt to trap regular expression syntax with overload.pm, as documented, use of interpolation causes only static fragments to be passed through to my package. Is there a standard way I can get access to the final generated string or to the original including the $bar interpolation? I'm about to write a piece of syntax like (?&91;NAME&93;...) but this requires that I be able to see the closing parenthese.

use My::Package; /<<<$bar>>>/; # RE=<<< # RE=>>>

My/Package.pm

package My::Package; use overload; sub import { overload::constant qr => \ &convert } sub convert { my $re = shift; print "RE=$re\n"; } 1;

In reply to overload::constant passes fragments, not whole strings under interpolation. Help? by diotalevi

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