To avoid this confusion, never use the trinary operator in a void context (when you have no intention of using the value returned). It's usually clearer to write it out, and avoids messy precedence issues like this. Remember that
?: is built so that it can be used in expressions as a replacement for a single value in a complex operation.
If all you're using it for is to control execution (make one assignment versus another), use a normal if/else construct:
if ($base_string =~ /^#/) {
$foo = $';
} else {
$bar = $base_string;
}
Arguably using
/^#(.*)/ and
$1 instead of
$' is going to be a bit more efficient. Generally it's best to shy away from
$` and
$', as these add costly operations to an otherwise straightforward regex match.
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