What would I have to do to be able to use "s\x{c3}\x{bc}\x{c3}\x{9f}e" as though it were "s\xc3\xbc\xc3\x9fe" ? I'm not sure what else is going on, but those strings are equivalent.
perl -MO=Deparse -e 'print "s\xc3\xbc\xc3\x9fe"'
perl -MO=Deparse -e 'print "s\x{c3}\x{bc}\x{c3}\x{9f}e"'
Both parse the same:
print "s\303\274\303\237e";
-e syntax OK
I wonder if you have standard output encoded correctly. Maybe adding this will help.
binmode STDOUT, ':utf8';
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