Sorry, but once again I need help to understand rather complicated snippet from the "Programming Perl" book. Here it is (what is obscure to me marked as bold):
patterns are parsed like double-quoted strings, all the normal double-quote conventions will work, including variable interpolation (unless you use single quotes as the delimiter) and special characters indicated with backslash escapes. These are applied before the string is interpreted as a regular expression (This is one of the few places in the Perl language where a string undergoes more than one pass of processing). ...
Another consequence of this two-pass parsing is that the ordinary Perl tokener finds the end of the regular expression first, just as if it were looking for the terminating delimiter of an ordinary string. Only after it has found the end of the string (and done any variable interpolation) is the pattern treated as a regular expression. Among other things, this means you can’t “hide” the terminating delimiter of a pattern inside a regex construct (such as a bracketed character class or a regex comment, which we haven’t covered yet). Perl will see the delimiter wherever it is and terminate the pattern at that point.
First, why it is said that Only after it has found the end of the string not the end of the regular expression which it was looking, as stated before?
Second, what does it mean you can’t “hide” the terminating delimiter of a pattern inside a regex construct? Why I can't hide the terminating delimiter /, whereas I can place it wherever I want either in the regexp directly /A\/C/ or in a interpolated variable (even without \):
my $s = 'A/';
my $p = 'A/C';
say $p =~ /$s/;
outputs 1.
While I was writing and re-reading my question I thought that this snippet tells about using a single-quote as a regexp delimiter, then it all seems quite cohesive. Is my assumption correct?
My appreciation.