In [
Perl Best Practices] from Damian Conway, there is an entry 'Non-Lexical Loop Iterators' in chapter 6 warning about this construct.
Without my, Perl does not use the variable $S4 for the loop, but instead uses a new lexically variable also named $S4.
Thats why the first variable $S4 is uninitialized in sub X.
So your code behaves like this:
#!env perl
use strict;
use warnings;
my $S4;
sub X {
print "<$S4>\n";
return $S4;
}
for my $other_variable_also_named_S4 (1 .. 2) {
print "A: <$other_variable_also_named_S4> <", X(), ">\n";
}
Conway warns to use this construct since its 'behaviour is contrary to all reasonable expectation'.
BTW: perlcritic warns about it too.
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