Optimizations, yes... But then, how could we not use code like `if $s ~~ 
/$<word>=[\w+]/ { say $<word> }`?

Speaking of the subject itself, I don't remember how sequences are actually 
implemented in details, but most likely the regex is processed inside the 
sequence iterator which owns the $/ used by the regex eventually. 

Best regards,
Vadim Belman

> On Dec 28, 2022, at 12:49 PM, Elizabeth Mattijsen <l...@dijkmat.nl> wrote:
> 
> That's because it at one time was decided that smart-match would set $/ in 
> the caller's scope.  Which is a pain for implementation and optimizations.  I 
> would be very much in favour of getting rid of that "feature", fwiw.
> 
>> On 28 Dec 2022, at 18:45, Sean McAfee <eef...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> 
>> But if a sequence has its own $/, why does * ~~ /9/ set $/?
>> 
>> Actually it's not just sequences, as a little more experimentation showed:
>> 
>> [0] > first /9/, ^Inf
>> 9
>> [1] > $/
>> Nil
>> [2] > grep /9/, ^10
>> (9)
>> [3] > $/
>> Nil
>> 
>> The * ~~ "trick" sets $/ in these cases too.
>> 
>> 
>> On Wed, Dec 28, 2022 at 12:01 PM Elizabeth Mattijsen <l...@dijkmat.nl> wrote:
>> This isn't specific to the REPL:
>> 
>> $ raku -e 'say 1 ... /9/; say $/'
>> (1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9)
>> Nil
>> 
>> I can only assume that the sequence has its own scope for $/, and thus isn't 
>> visible outside of it.
>> 
>> 
>> Liz
>> 
>>> On 28 Dec 2022, at 16:47, Sean McAfee <eef...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> 
>>> In a fresh 2022.12 Raku REPL, when the endpoint of a sequence is a Regex, 
>>> the $/ variable seems not to be set:
>>> 
>>> [0] > 1 ... /9/
>>> (1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9)
>>> [1] > $/
>>> Nil
>>> 
>>> If I match more explicitly using a WhateverCode, it works:
>>> 
>>> [2] > 1 ... * ~~ /9/
>>> (1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9)
>>> [3] > $/
>>> 「9」
>>> 
>>> Is this the intended behavior, or a bug?
>>> 
>> 
> 

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