This might provide some insight:

$ perl -wE 'say hex 0xAf; say hex q{0xAf}; say hex qq{0xAf};' 373 175 175 $ perl -wE 'say sprintf q{%s}, 0xAf; say sprintf q{%s}, q{0xAf}; say s +printf q{%s}, qq{0xAf};' 175 0xAf 0xAf $ perl -wE 'say hex 175' 373 $ perl -wE 'say oct 0xAf; say oct q{0xAf}; say oct qq{0xAf};' 125 175 175 $ perl -wE 'say oct 175' 125

In oct it says: "If EXPR happens to start off with 0x , interprets it as a hex string."

Just for reference, here's the hex link.

-- Ken


In reply to Re: To hex EXPR or 'EXPR' is my question by kcott
in thread To hex EXPR or 'EXPR' is my question by biohisham

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