Well, what the first couple folks said doesn't actually answer your question... they were answering what *would* have been your question if you *had* had break statements... I don't know if the original post was updated after the fact or if they simply did not actually read it... whatever.
The short answer is that there isn't anything that does this very well, and in the same way as C does. The thing to understand is that switch statements in C are actually just well-written GOTO statements! Likewise, the best way to do this might be GOTOs (as bad as that might sound)... or just coding it explicitly, something like:
for ( $var ) {
my $go;
($go || $_ == 10) and $go++, print "a";
($go || $_ == 9 ) and $go++, print "b";
($go || $_ == 8 ) and $go++, print "c";
($go || $_ == 7 ) and $go++, print "d";
($go || $_ == 6 ) and $go++, print "e";
($go || $_ == 5 ) and $go++, print "f";
($go || $_ == 4 ) and $go++, print "g";
($go || $_ == 3 ) and $go++, print "h";
($go || $_ == 2 ) and $go++, print "i";
($go || $_ == 1 ) and $go++, print "j";
}
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:Wq
Not an editor command: Wq