As
moritz said, this is actually a shell command.
eval is both a shell and a Perl command, but in this case it is the shell version.
In most UNIX shells (not csh), $? is the status of the previous command (in Perl it is the exit status of the previous child process - not the same thing). In a shell, parentheses create a
sub-shell which is a new shell environment (I use the term loosly) in the same process, so
eval '(exit $?0)' in
shell exits the sub-shell (not the current process). In shells, an evaluation of non-zero is considered false, and 0 is considered true (consider 0 to be 'success').
exec also is in both shells and Perl, and it replaces the current program with a new one in the same process, so it will replace the shell with perl.
In this case, the
if 0 will be considered part of the command by a shell. However, in Perl the
if 0 has precedence, so none of that will be executed if we are running perl, zero being false in perl (and most languages). Try:
print "A " && print "B " && print "C " if 0;