The cheap but punctuation-heavy answer:
my $string = "this is an interpolated method call: @{[$obj->method]}";
What's happening here, working from the inside out:
  1. The method call happens, and it returns a list of zero or more values.
  2. Outside that, we have an anonymous array constructor, so now we've got a reference to an anonymous array containing the value(s) returned from the method.
  3. Outside that, we have @{ }, which dereferences the array reference, so we have an array.
  4. Perl now happily interpolates the dynamically-generated anonymous array into the string, because it knows how to do that.
This is essentially what Interpolation.pm does, cut down to adding a few extra characters in your string. Drawback: ugly, and possibly really confusing to the reader. Advantage: only 5 extra characters.

In reply to Re: Calling a method within a double-quoted string? by pemungkah
in thread Calling a method within a double-quoted string? by Anonymous Monk

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