You were right the second time. That is a good way to explain things. Usually it is best to start out with a multi-line piece of code, rather than trying to write a very complex one liner. It is easier to debug the multi-line piece and then simplify it down into a one liner.
One clarification... (
Unfortunately, " "is NEVER true in Perl)... There are some things that are true that you wouldn't think are true (in this case
" " actually is). Try some of the following...
perl -e 'print "1\n" if "";'
perl -e 'print "1\n" if " ";'
perl -e '@a=(); print "1\n" if @a;'
perl -e '@a=(undef); print "1\n" if @a;'
Empty strings and empty lists do evaluate to false. Strings and lists with even one item evaluate to true, even if that one item is itself false.
my @a=qw(random brilliant braindead); print $a[rand(@a)];
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