Perl doesn't know that Some/Module.pm is a module when you load it with -c. All it knows is that you've given it a filename--and that filename can be anything and have any extension that your particular operating system and filesystem allow.
Just as a .pl file doesn't have to end by returning a true value, neither does a module until you tell Perl to treat it as a module. The -M flag does that, just as do use and require.
Edit: removed a sentence.
In reply to Re: Debugging failed "use" statement.
by chromatic
in thread Debugging failed "use" statement.
by cLive ;-)
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