Well, if this is driving you crazy, you're not alone. I tried your code on my system (ActiveState Perl 5.12) and used Data::Dumper. When I print the variable (print "$text\n";), it appears just as you want it. When I do print Dumper($text);, it has an extra \ in it just like you're seeing.
As for why Data::Dumper is not matching the print statement, I'm stumped.
In reply to Re: Incredibly stupid substitution question :(
by dasgar
in thread Incredibly stupid substitution question :(
by viffer
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