Change fubar() to this:
sub fubar {
${$_[0]} = 4;
print "${$_[0]}\n";
}
Unfortunately for you, this is one of those cases where
Perl's Do-What-I-Mean nature happens to do what
someone else meant. In effect, what you did was set
${$_}[0] = 4; which, since $_ isn't
declared but is special winds up creating an
anonymous array in $_ which has a single item in
it, 4. All that without complaining since $_
has so much magic surrounding it. =)
The problem there is that perl binds "$" stronger
than "[]" so it deref's $_ rather than
deref'ing @_'s first item. HTH, BTW this sort
of question really belongs in Seekers of Perl Wisdom...
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