I am messing around with eval since it's cool
Block eval (for exception handling) is cool; string eval is ... luke warm. OK, it is fun, but you should try to avoid
it in production code.
Quoting merlyn from •Re^2: Dynamically constructed function calls:
Do not resort to eval-string if other means are available. You're firing up the compiler (slower than almost any other solution), and exposing yourself to hard to debug and hard to secure practices.
Update: If you want a second opinion, see
this quiz of the week where MJD states:
A good rule of thumb is that unless what you're trying
to do is most clearly described as "compile and run
arbitrary Perl code", it's probably a mistake to
use 'eval' to do it.
Somewhat related, symbolic references are also evil,
as convincingly demonstrated by MJD in three parts:
part 1 and part 2 and part 3.
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