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I would like to take input from a text file in Perl. Though lot of info are available over the net, it is still very confusing as to how to do this simple task of printing every line of text file. So how to do it? I am new to Perl, thus the confusion .

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4 Answers 4

4

eugene has already shown the proper way. Here is a shorter script:

#!/usr/bin/perl
print while <>

or, equivalently,

#!/usr/bin/perl -p

on the command line:

perl -pe0 textfile.txt

You should start learning the language methodically, following a decent book, not through haphazard searches on the web.

You should also make use of the extensive documentation that comes with Perl.

See perldoc perltoc or perldoc.perl.org.

For example, opening files is covered in perlopentut.

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  • That would need to be perl -p -e0 textfile.txt or perl -p /dev/null textfile.txt or similar to keep either stdin or textfile.txt from being treated as the perl program to run.
    – ysth
    Aug 31, 2010 at 15:13
  • If you don't want to put the filename on the command line, I will often hardcode in quick n dirty scripts: @ARGV="filename.txt"; You can also put the "-p" or a "-n" on the shebang (e.g., #!/usr/bin/perl -p) line.
    – runrig
    Aug 31, 2010 at 15:26
3

First, open the file:

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

Next, use the while loop to read until EOF:

while (<$fh>) {
    # line contents's automatically stored in the $_ variable
}
close $fh or die $!;
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# open the file and associate with a filehandle
open my $file_handle, '<', 'your_filename'
  or die "Can't open your_filename: $!\n";

while (<$file_handle>) {
  # $_ contains each record from the file in turn
}
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  • @jm666 Thanks. I got halfway through fixing that a month ago and then completely forgot about it. Fixed now.
    – Dave Cross
    Apr 3, 2017 at 12:24
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    @HiginioFuentes: You should probably post this as a question - including a runnable version of your code.
    – Dave Cross
    Jul 3, 2023 at 8:11
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Despite of the fact that Perl have many ways to do the things, this one is ok:

use strict;
use warnings;
my $filename = "nombres-sin.txt";
open(FH, "<nombres-sin.txt") or die "Not open $filename or$!";
while(<FH>) {
    print "$_";
}
close(FH) or die "No puedo cerrar! or $!";
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  • 2
    This answer repeats what has already been posted, but using the old Perl 4 style of doing things. Jul 5, 2023 at 14:19
  • @briandfoy, my version goes like a charm, the other one is not running correctly. Jul 13, 2023 at 3:23

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