Ok, that looks a lot closer to the PHP syntax. I do wonder about the following, though:
"Blocks of the form <% xxx %> are replaced with the result of evaluating xxx as a single Perl expression."
Is the page file run like a regular Perl script, only with things outside the Perl tags returned as-is? Or is there an extra layer between the Perl interpreter and the page that does messy things like eval to convert the page to output? In other words, is Mason actually integrated into the basic Perl, or is it sitting on top? How does the efficiency compare to PHP?
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