diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'pod')
-rw-r--r-- | pod/perlfunc.pod | 6 |
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/pod/perlfunc.pod b/pod/perlfunc.pod index 8e5bd663b6..062f0f2bee 100644 --- a/pod/perlfunc.pod +++ b/pod/perlfunc.pod @@ -1625,7 +1625,7 @@ In the first form, the return value of EXPR is parsed and executed as if it were a little Perl program. The value of the expression (which is itself determined within scalar context) is first parsed, and if there were no errors, executed as a block within the lexical context of the current Perl -program. This means, that in particular, any outer lexical variables are +program. This means, that in particular, any outer lexical variables are visible to it, and any package variable settings or subroutine and format definitions remain afterwards. @@ -1671,7 +1671,7 @@ the die operator is used to raise exceptions. If you want to trap errors when loading an XS module, some problems with the binary interface (such as Perl version skew) may be fatal even with -C<eval> unless C<$ENV{PERL_DL_NONLAZY}> is set. See L<perlrun>. +C<eval> unless C<$ENV{PERL_DL_NONLAZY}> is set. See L<perlrun>. If the code to be executed doesn't vary, you may use the eval-BLOCK form to trap run-time errors without incurring the penalty of @@ -1759,7 +1759,7 @@ C<next>, C<last>, or C<redo> cannot be used to leave or restart the block. An C<eval ''> executed within the C<DB> package doesn't see the usual surrounding lexical scope, but rather the scope of the first non-DB piece -of code that called it. You don't normally need to worry about this unless +of code that called it. You don't normally need to worry about this unless you are writing a Perl debugger. =item exec LIST |