As typed on a Windows command-line:
C:\>perl -c -e "use strict; {}; no strict \"refs\";"
Output:
-e syntax OK
Now delete the semicolon after the block:
C:\>perl -c -e "use strict; {} no strict \"refs\";"
Output:
String found where operator expected at -e line 1, near "no strict "re
+fs""
(Do you need to predeclare no?)
"no" not allowed in expression at -e line 1, near "} "
syntax error at -e line 1, near "} no strict "
-e had compilation errors.
I see what's happening, but was startled when this happened inside a script. Is an empty block indeed not a block, but a statement requiring a semicolon terminator?
Jim Keenan
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