After a filehandle is open for reading, you can read lines from it just as you can read from standard input with STDIN
. So, for example, to read lines from a text file:
open (FIL,"some_file"); while (<FIL>) { chomp; print "I saw $_ in some_file!\n"; }
Note that the newly opened filehandle is used inside the angle brackets, just as we have used STDIN
previously.
If you have a filehandle open for writing or appending, and if you want to print to it, you must place the filehandle immediately after the print keyword and before the other arguments. No comma should occur between the filehandle and the rest of the arguments:
print LOGFILE "Finished item $n of $max\n"; print STDOUT "hi, world!\n";
In this case, the message beginning with Finished
goes to the LOGFILE
filehandle, which presumably was opened earlier in the program. And hi,
world
still goes to standard output, just as when you didn't specify the filehandle. We say that STDOUT
is the default filehandle for the print
statement.
Here's a way to copy all of the text from a file specified in $a
into a file specified in $b
. It illustrates nearly everything we've learned in the last few pages:[7]
[7] Although this method is entirely redundant when you consider the
File::Copy
module.
open(IN,$a) || die "cannot open $a for reading: $!"; open(OUT,">$b") || die "cannot create $b: $!"; while (<IN>) { # read a line from file $a into $_ print OUT $_; # print that line to file $b } close(IN) || die "can't close $a:$!"; close(OUT) || die "can't close $b:$!";