The "weird behavior" you observe has nothing to do with
sprintf, it's just interpolation in double-quoted strings.
Seeing "$a[%d]", the interpolation rules require that $a[...] interpolates an element of @a
in the string. That means that the part inside [...] is interpreted as Perl code, not as part of the string. Thus %d is evaluated as an undeclared hash in scalar context (it can because you are running without strict), which is 0. The result is the same as
"$a[0]", which is "1".
For similar reasons, "$a[%2d]" is a syntax error.
In "\$a[%d]" the dollar sigil is escaped, so the part in [...] is a plain string and the result is
$a[%d].
If something is weird about the behavior, it's string interpolation itself. Mainly your example serves as an object lesson on the importance of strictures.
Anno
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