I am facing issues with perl chomp function. I have a test.csv as below:
col1,col2
vm1,fd1
vm2,fd2
vm3,fd3
vm4,fd4
I want to print the 2nd field of this csv. This is my code:
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use strict;
my $file = "test.csv";
open (my $FH, '<', $file);
my @array = (<$FH>);
close $FH;
foreach (@array)
{
my @row = split (/,/,$_);
my $var = chomp ($row[1]); ### <<< this is the problem
print $var;
}
The output of aboe code is :
11111
I really don't know where the "1" is comming from. Actually, the last filed can be printed as below:
foreach (@array)
{
my @row = split (/,/,$_);
print $row[1]; ### << Note that I am not printing "\n"
}
the output is:
vm_cluster
fd1
fd2
fd3
fd4
Now, i am using these field values as an input to the DB and the DB INSERT statement is failing due this invisible newline. So I thought chomp would help me here. instead of chomping, it gives me "11111".
Could you help me understand what am i doing wrong here.
Thanks.
Adding more information after reading loldop's responce:
If I write as below, then it will not print anything (not even the "11111" output mentioned above)
foreach (@array)
{
my @row = split (/,/,$_);
chomp ($row[1]);
my $var = $row[1];
print $var;
}
Meaning, chomp is removing the last string and the trailing new line.
chomp
return1
if this function ending successfully. so, justchomp $_; $mygoodvar = $_;
1
because it has removed one newline.$row[1]
, and it removes a newline from the end of$row[1]
. Print the value of$row[1]
and you will see.