It's possible to quote URL's quite easilly in perl:  (maybe corion can clarify his answer):

    my $url = q{http://my.url.com/any/arbitrary/path/in/the/url.html};

In fact, the various quoting mechanisms in perl are quite interesting.  The perl regex-like quoting mechanisms allow you to quote anything, specifying the delimiters.  You can use almost any special character like #, /, or open/close characters like (), [], or {}.  Examples:

    my $var  = q#some string where the pound is the final escape.#;
    my $var2 = q{A more pleasant way of escaping.};
    my $var3 = q(Others prefer parens as the quote mechanism.);

Quoting mechanisms:

q  : literal quote; only character that needs to be escaped is the end character.
qq : an interpreted quote; processes variables and escape characters.  Great for strings that you need to quote:

    my $var4 = qq{This "$mechanism" is broken.  Please inform "$user" at "$email" about it.};

qx : Works like qq, but then executes it as a system command, non interactively.  Returns all the text generated from the standard out.  (Redirection, if supported in the OS, also comes out)  Also done with back quotes (the ` character)


    my $output  = qx{type "$path"};      # get just the output
    my $moreout = qx{type "$path" 2>&1}; # get stuff on stderr too

qr : Interprets like qq, but then compiles it as a regular expression.  Works with the various options on the regex as well.  You can now pass the regex around as a variable:

    sub MyRegexCheck {
        my ($string, $regex) = @_;
        if ($string)
        {
           return ($string =~ $regex);
        }
        return; # returns 'null' or 'empty' in every context
    }
    
    my $regex = qr{http://[\w]\.com/([\w]+/)+};
    @results = MyRegexCheck(q{http://myurl.com/subpath1/subpath2/}, $regex);

qw : A very, very useful quote operator.  Turns a quoted set of whitespace separated words into a list.  Great for filling in data in a unit test.

<pre><code>
   my @allowed = qw(A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z { });
   my @badwords = qw(WORD1 word2 word3 word4);
   my @numbers = qw(one two three four 5 six seven); # works with numbers too
   my @list = ('string with space', qw(eight nine), "a $var"); # works in other lists
   my $arrayref = [ qw(and it works in arrays too) ]; 
</code></pre>

They're great to use them whenever it makes things clearer.  For qx, qq, and q, I most likely use the {} operators.  The most common habit of people using qw is usually the () operator, but sometimes you also see qw//.