You could say the parens are mostly ignored, here (they just influence operator precedence — between only commas, so no effect there), not induce grouping. Perl simply flattens the list. So your first example is equivalent to
my %hash=(
"outer"=>
"cool"=>1,
"Kewl"=> 2,"odd"
);
which is a fancy way of writing
my %hash=(
"outer", "cool", 1, "Kewl", 2,"odd"
);
You can witness this flattening of the list by passing your construct as parameters to a sub and have it check what it received:
use Data::Dumper;
sub test {
print Dumper \@_;
}
test(
"outer"=>(
"cool"=>1,
"Kewl"=>2,"odd"
)
);
Result:
$VAR1 = [
'outer',
'cool',
1,
'Kewl',
2,
'odd'
];
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