The Why

It behaves this way to avoid misleading error messages. Imagine that use Env; did what you want.

>perl -le "use strict; use Env; print $CONFIG;" Global symbol "$CONFIG" requires explicit package name

You should give a better error message or use a default when the variable isn't specified.

Workarounds

Just specify the variables you wish to import.

>perl -le "use strict; use Env qw( $WINDIR ); print $WINDIR;" E:\WINNT

Or declare the variable.

>perl -le "use strict; use Env; our $WINDIR; print $WINDIR;" E:\WINNT

Of course, there's always $ENV{WINDIR}.

>perl -le "use strict; print $ENV{WINDIR};" E:\WINNT

Update: Added the reason for this behaviour.


In reply to Re: Can't be 'strict' with Env ?? by ikegami
in thread Can't be 'strict' with Env ?? by Wiggins

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