The core of the problem is that you don't realise that interpolation inserts the string in literally.
$ perl -E' say "\x61"; $x="\\x61"; say "$x"; $x="\$x"; say "$x"; ' a \x61 $x
If you want to treat the content of a Perl variable as Perl code, you need to use eval EXPR.
In reply to Re: hex code passed from command line is interpreted literally in substitution
by ikegami
in thread hex code passed from command line is interpreted literally in substitution
by Allasso
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