I'm sure it's still supported, but it's pretty much obsolete. If you want the regex to be compiled only once, you're better off using a regex object, like so:
my $reg = qr/foo$bar/;
The interpolation of $bar is done when the variable is initialized, so you will always be using the cached, compiled regex from then on within the enclosing scope. But sometimes you want the regex to be recompiled, because you want it to use the variable's new value. Here's the example Friedl used in The Book:
sub CheckLogfileForToday()
{
my $today = (qw<Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat>)[(localtime)[6]];
my $RegexObj today_regex = qr/^$today:/i; # compiles once per function call
while (<LOGFILE>) {
if ($_ =~ $RegexObj) today_regex) {
...
}
}
}
Within the scope of the function, the value of $RegexObj today_regex stays the same. But the next time the function is called, the regex will be recompiled with the new value of $today. If he had just used
if ($_ =~ m/^$today:/io)
...the regex would never be updated. So, with the object form you have the efficiency of /o without sacrificing flexibility.
