Ah, the eval function. Loved, hated. Mostly the latter.

$ perl -E'my $program = q[say "OH HAI"]; eval $program' OH HAI

I was a bit stunned when the eval function was renamed to EVAL in Perl 6 (back in 2013, after spec discussion here). I've never felt really comfortable with the rationale for doing so. I seem to be more or less alone in this opinion, though, which is fine.

The rationale was "the function does something really weird, so we should flag it with upper case". Like we do with BEGIN and the other phasers, for example. With BEGIN and others, the upper-casing is motivated, I agree. A phaser takes you "outside of the normal control flow". The eval function doesn't.

Other things that we upper-case are things like .WHAT , which look like attributes but are really specially code-generated at compile-time into something completely different. So even there the upper-casing is motivated because something outside of the normal is happening.

eval in the end is just another function. Yes, it's a function with potentially quite wide-ranging side effects, that's true. But a lot of fairly standard functions have wide-ranging side effects. (To name a few: shell , die , exit .) You don't see anyone clamoring to upper-case those.

I guess it could be argued that eval is very special because it hooks into the compiler and runtime in ways that normal functions don't, and maybe can't. (This is also how TimToady explained it in the commit message of the renaming commit.) But that's an argument from implementation details, which doesn't feel satisfactory. It applies with equal force to the lower-cased functions just mentioned.

To add insult to injury, the renamed EVAL is also made deliberately harder to use:

$ perl6 -e'my $program = q[say "OH HAI"]; EVAL $program' ===SORRY!=== Error while compiling -e EVAL is a very dangerous function!!! (use the MONKEY-SEE-NO-EVAL pragma to override this error, but only if you're VERY sure your data contains no injection attacks) at -e:1 ------> program = q[say "OH HAI"]; EVAL $program⏏<EOL> $ perl6 -e'use MONKEY-SEE-NO-EVAL; my $program = q[say "OH HAI"]; EVAL $program' OH HAI

Firstly, injection attacks are a real issue, and no laughing matter. We should educate each other and newcomers about them.

Secondly, that error message ( "EVAL is a very dangerous function!!!" ) is completely over-the-top in a way that damages rather than helps. I believe when we explain the dangers of code injection to people, we need to do it calmly and matter-of-factly. Not with three exclamation marks. The error message makes sense to someone who already knows about injection attacks; it provides no hints or clues for people who are unaware of the risks.

(The Perl 6 community is not unique in eval -hysteria. Yesterday I stumbled across a StackOverflow thread about how to turn a string with a type name into the corresponding constructor in JavaScript. Some unlucky soul suggested eval , and everybody else immediately piled on to point out how irresponsible that was. Solely as a knee-jerk reaction "because eval is bad".)

Thirdly, MONKEY-SEE-NO-EVAL . Please, can we just... not. 😓 Random reference to monkies and the weird attempt at levity while switching on a nuclear-chainsaw function aside, I find it odd that a function that enables EVAL is called something with NO-EVAL . That's not Least Surprise.

Anyway, the other day I realized how I can get around both the problem of the all-caps name and the problem of the necessary pragma:

$ perl6 -e'my &eval = &EVAL; my $program = q[say "OH HAI"]; eval $program' OH HAI