Technically speaking, this is so because the "if" in the first example is a statement modifier, while the "if" in the second example is a compound statement (see: The Camel, 3rd Version, page 112-115, or perldoc perlsyn), and compound statement syntax requires the parens, while statement modifier syntax does not, but takes an expression without parens.
Psychologically speaking (*why* is this so), I have no idea.
Christian Lemburg
Brainbench MVP for Perl
http://www.brainbench.com
In reply to Re: parens question
by clemburg
in thread parens question
by nop
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