When we use exec in form of: exec LIST or print "foo"; die "bar";
it gives wrong (I guess) lines order in output subject to presence of
"\n" in print statement:
perl -E 'use warnings; exec "echo 1" or print "First line";
die "Second line";'
1
perl -E 'use warnings; exec "echos 1" or print "First line";
die "Second line";'
Can't exec "echos": No such file or directory at -e line 1.
Second line at -e line 1.
First line
perl -E 'use warnings; exec "echos 1" or print "First line\n";
die "Second line";'
Can't exec "echos": No such file or directory at -e line 1.
First line
Second line at -e line 1.
Is it a normal behavior or not?
it gives wrong (I guess) lines order in output subject to presence of
"\n" in print statement:
perl -E 'use warnings; exec "echo 1" or print "First line";
die "Second line";'
1
perl -E 'use warnings; exec "echos 1" or print "First line";
die "Second line";'
Can't exec "echos": No such file or directory at -e line 1.
Second line at -e line 1.
First line
perl -E 'use warnings; exec "echos 1" or print "First line\n";
die "Second line";'
Can't exec "echos": No such file or directory at -e line 1.
First line
Second line at -e line 1.
Is it a normal behavior or not?