{if (0 == $foo) vs if ($foo == 0)} The reason some people recommend the latter is because if you accidently type the == equality operator as the = assignment operator, you will get an error (not so for the former). Since I vary rarely get bitten by this, I still use the former.
That's a C thing; that is, a practise that was used among C programmers long before Perl programmers started coding.
It's not really necessary to do so in Perl; with warnings on, if you mistake the operator, Perl will warn (Found = in conditional, should be == at ...). I think some C compilers (like gcc) will warn if you have an assignment in a conditional as well; which can be disabled by using an additional set of parenthesis.
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