The way you print in the first example:
perl -e "@now = localtime(); for $now(@now) {print $now;}"
is tricky because the result looks rather like a scalar (a sort of big integer)
and does not show the "list form" we got from the context.
Something like :
perl -e "@now = localtime(); print join(',',@now);"
should give a better "image".
More, unfortunately, the "scalar" output is a string of enumerated words
which looks more like a list !
(first impression is important for a tutor ;-)
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