2

I was reading a tutorial that said every Perl programs should begin with a

#!D:\Perl\bin\perl

What is the purpose of that? It didn't explain at all on the tutorial.

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2 Answers 2

9

There is no point to that "header". The shebang line is used by unix program loaders, which you're obviously not using.

Without it, the system would have no way of knowing how to run your script. The person executing your script would have to launch perl and tell it to run the script themselves. In other words, it allows one to replace

/usr/bin/perl program

with

program

In Windows, this is handled by file associations.

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  • Why is it used by unix kernels? I also have a macbook I would like to program on.
    – mtrmilk
    Mar 4, 2013 at 14:06
5

That line in scripts is the known as the shebang. In a unix type of operating system, it tells the program loader what the rest of the file should be processed with.

I think the norm now is to use a perl found on the path with a line such as:

#!/usr/bin/env perl

Since yours looks like Windows, the shebang is largely ignored, but perl does still look to it to see if you passed a flag such -w or -T for instance.

3
  • So it tells the shell that it is a perl program? Doesn't the .pl extension already do that? Thank you.
    – mtrmilk
    Mar 4, 2013 at 14:06
  • 1
    In Windows, yes. Elsewhere, no, at least not for the purpose of executing it.
    – ikegami
    Mar 4, 2013 at 14:10
  • 2
    Who writes executables with a .pl file extension anyway? :)
    – Quentin
    Mar 4, 2013 at 16:27

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