Buffering?
Throw a print "\n";
after the print join and see if it works (you probably didn't want the results from each line butted up against each other anyhow)
You may want to set $|=1 at the start too, if you haven't already.
I'm looking at Pro Perl by Peter Wainwright, and it indicates that:
1) setting $| or
2) using the autoflush method, if using IO::File or IO::Handle or
3) printing to a terminal (not sure how perl sees your IDE)
turns off block buffering, but line buffering is still active. I'd think terminating the line should guarantee a flush.
-Greg
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