To elucidate further,
\( 1, 2, 3, 4 ) is just short for
( \1, \2, \3, \4 ):
$ perl -le'
use Data::Dumper;
@x = \( 4, 5, 6, 7 );
print Dumper \@x;
'
$VAR1 = [
\4,
\5,
\6,
\7
];
$ perl -le'
use Data::Dumper;
@x = ( \4, \5, \6, \7 );
print Dumper \@x;
'
$VAR1 = [
\4,
\5,
\6,
\7
];
And the assignment to a scalar does the same thing with or without the backslash(es):
$ perl -le'
use Data::Dumper;
$x = ( 4, 5, 6, 7 );
print Dumper $x;
'
$VAR1 = 7;
$ perl -le'
use Data::Dumper;
$x = \( 4, 5, 6, 7 );
print Dumper $x;
'
$VAR1 = \7;
$ perl -le'
use Data::Dumper;
$x = ( \4, \5, \6, \7 );
print Dumper $x;
'
$VAR1 = \7;
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