Changes the permissions of a list of files. The first element of the
list must be the numerical mode, which should probably be an octal
-number, and which definitely should I<not> a string of octal digits:
+number, and which definitely should I<not> be a string of octal digits:
C<0644> is okay, C<'0644'> is not. Returns the number of files
successfully changed. See also L</oct>, if all you have is a string.
=item pos
Returns the offset of where the last C<m//g> search left off for the variable
-in question (C<$_> is used when the variable is not specified). May be
-modified to change that offset. Such modification will also influence
-the C<\G> zero-width assertion in regular expressions. See L<perlre> and
+in question (C<$_> is used when the variable is not specified). Note that
+0 is a valid match offset, while C<undef> indicates that the search position
+is reset (usually due to match failure, but can also be because no match has
+yet been performed on the scalar). C<pos> directly accesses the location used
+by the regexp engine to store the offset, so assigning to C<pos> will change
+that offset, and so will also influence the C<\G> zero-width assertion in
+regular expressions. Because a failed C<m//gc> match doesn't reset the offset,
+the return from C<pos> won't change either in this case. See L<perlre> and
L<perlop>.
=item print FILEHANDLE LIST
=item wantarray
Returns true if the context of the currently executing subroutine or
-eval() block is looking for a list value. Returns false if the context is
+C<eval> is looking for a list value. Returns false if the context is
looking for a scalar. Returns the undefined value if the context is
looking for no value (void context).
my @a = complex_calculation();
return wantarray ? @a : "@a";
+C<wantarray()>'s result is unspecified in the top level of a file,
+in a C<BEGIN>, C<CHECK>, C<INIT> or C<END> block, or in a C<DESTROY>
+method.
+
This function should have been named wantlist() instead.
=item warn LIST