is usually a Bad Idea in a switch statement. However, this
is Perl, not a police state, so there I<is> a way to do it, if you must.
-If a C<case> block executes an untargetted C<next>, control is
+If a C<case> block executes an untargeted C<next>, control is
immediately transferred to the statement I<after> the C<case> statement
(i.e. usually another case), rather than out of the surrounding
C<switch> block.
case /\d/ { handle_dig_any(); }
}
-If an untargetted C<last> statement is executed in a case block, this
+If an untargeted C<last> statement is executed in a case block, this
immediately transfers control out of the enclosing C<switch> block
(in other words, there is an implicit C<last> at the end of each
normal C<case> block). Thus the previous example could also have been