=item *
+C<-l> followed by a bareword no longer "eats" the previous argument to
+the list operator in whose argument list it resides. Hence,
+C<print "bar", -l foo> now actually prints "bar", because C<-l>
+on longer eats it.
+
+=item *
+
Perl keeps several internal variables to keep track of the last stat
buffer, from which file(handle) it originated, what type it was, and
whether the last stat succeeded.
=item *
-C<-l> followed by a bareword no longer "eats" the previous argument to
-the list operator in whose argument list it resides. In less convoluted
-English: C<print "bar", -l foo> now actually prints "bar", because C<-l>
-on longer eats it.
-
-=item *
-
C<shmread> was not setting the scalar flags correctly when reading from
shared memory, causing the existing cached numeric representation in the
scalar to persist [perl #98480].