There is not a universal compile-time in perl. If you execute an eval($somestring) for example, the code inside the eval has a compile-time long after the main program executes.

use Module is equivalent to the sequence BEGIN { require Module; Module->import( LIST ); }, you probably have already read about this. The BEGIN is the statement that moves any code into "compile-time" to be executed as soon as possible). When you 'use A', your "require Exporter" is already inside a BEGIN and therefore executed at compile-time of your main module. And because the import is after the require (so there is a strict order) in the same BEGIN, the import comes after the require


In reply to Re: loading modules using 'use' by jethro
in thread loading modules using 'use' by angshuman

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