The way I see it, the backslash
\( ) syntax has to evaluate its arguments in list context.
It
also has to treat
@arrays and
%hashes with care: should it expand it out into a list & take references of its elements, or just take the reference to the actual
@array / %hash itself?
To disambiguate the two, the second command shows that perl won't expand
@array / %hash into LIST unless you have specifically parenthesized it.
The third command shows that if
@array / %hash was the
only argument to
\( ), then perl makes the (inconsistent) choice to expand it into a LIST, and take the reference of each list element. A probable rationale is that if you wanted the reference to the actual hash itself, you would do
\%hash instead of
\(%hash).
The fourth command is like the second command. The empty list puts perl back in the second command's evaluation "frame of mind".
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