Well, for one, @_ is in array context, so one appropriate way to fetch $t and use $t in the subroutine extractDate is:
my ($t) = @_;
or you could use
my $t = shift;
If you add the code
print "t = $t\n";
below your original $t assignment in your function, it returns the value 1.
This shows that the net effect of
my $t = @_;
is
my $t = scalar @_;
Instead of a time, you're getting the total number of elements in the array @_.
Update: added comments about array to scalar assignment.
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