use strict; use warnings; use B::Deparse; sub make_multiplier { my $n = shift; return sub { $n * $_[0] }; } my $double = make_multiplier(2); my $treble = make_multiplier(3); print "double and treble clearly do different things...\n"; print "double 5: ", $double->(5), "\n"; print "treble 5: ", $treble->(5), "\n\n"; my $deparse = B::Deparse->new; $deparse->ambient_pragmas(strict => 'all', warnings => 'all'); print "yet, here is the B::Deparse output for double...\n"; print $deparse->coderef2text($double), "\n\n"; print "and here is the B::Deparse output for treble...\n"; print $deparse->coderef2text($treble), "\n"; __END__ double and treble clearly do different things... double 5: 10 treble 5: 15 yet, here is the B::Deparse output for double... { $n * $_[0]; } and here is the B::Deparse output for treble... { $n * $_[0]; }