The complete story is more complicated still, as perl is able to dynamically link to "Perl" libraries compiled from other languages, including C and C++.
But this is an aside. The problem in Perl is that certain operations can only be parsed completely in the run-time context.
Consider the following, for which C has no analog (buffer overflows notwithstanding).
my $str = $ARGV[0];
eval("use $str;");
Now, some theorists will complain bitterly that this
must slow your code down, but this is usually the least of your problems. (See
Optimising Perl.. for example)
Thog.
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