13

The following (not very Perl-ish) code

#!/usr/bin/perl

if (! -e "mydir/")
{
  print "directory doesn't exist.\n";
}
open (my $fh, ">", "mydir/file.txt");
if ($fh)
{
  print "file opened.\n";
  print $fh;
  print $fh "some text\n" or die "failed to write to file.\n";
  close ($fh);
}
else
{
  print "failed to open file.\n";
}

produces the output such as this

directory doesn't exist.
file opened.
failed to write to file.
GLOB(0x...some-hex-digits...)

Why is $fh not equivalent to false following the open call? As mydir/ does not exist, I'd expect the attempt to open the file to fail.

I get similar results if the directory and file exist, but the file is read-only.

I've tried this with Perl 5.10.1 on Windows 7 x64, and with Perl 5.10.0 on Fedora-11 Linux.

I'm guessing my file handle test is wrong. I've tried Googling this without luck. I expect it's something obvious, but any hints or links would be much appreciated.

Thanks, Rob.

5 Answers 5

20

open returns a non-zero value on success, and a "false" value on failure. The idiom you are looking for is

if (open my $fh, '>', $file) {
    # open was successful
} else {
    # open failed - handle error
}

If the first argument ($fh) is undefined (as it is in this case), open will initialize it to some arbitrary value (see the Symbol::genysm method) before it attempts to open the file. So $fh will always be "true" even if the open call fails.

1
  • The other nice thing about this pattern is that you do not need to close $fh; because it is automatically done at the end of the if block when $fh goes out of scope. There is more detail at this Perlmonks post: perlmonks.org/?node_id=376754 Feb 19, 2019 at 9:04
19

$fh isn't being set to a zero-ish value, it is being set to a GLOB as your code shows. This is different from what open returns which is why the idiom is

open(...) or die ... ;

or

unless(open(...)) {
    ...
}
9

From perldoc:

Open returns nonzero on success, the undefined value otherwise.

An often used idiom is

open my $fh, '<', $filename or die $!;

Of course you can do something else than simply die.

1
  • Additional tip: use perldoc -f open to get help on a Perl built-in function.
    – dolmen
    Jul 8, 2010 at 15:16
8

In addition to the explanations in the other answers:

Check out the autodie module which comes with perl 5.10.1 and up (and is available separately from CPAN).

0

Just a warning

unless (open my $fh , '<', 'foobar') {
    print "Error Opening";
}
print $fh, "Some Text";

will fail, as $fh is defined in unless context, not outside/after it. So only the if contruct from above will work.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.