2

Perhaps I am misunderstanding encodings etc, but whenever I specify an encoding on opening an expression under a writeable mode, printing to the handle appears to have no effect.

Code:

my $string = "one\n";

#open my $handle, '>>', \$string or die "cannot open: $!";
open my $handle, '>>:encoding(UTF-8)', \$string or die "cannot open: $!";

print $handle "two\n";

print $string;

Output:

one

Expected Output:

one
two

Could somebody please explain why this is so.

Thanks,

Chris

2
  • What is the use of \$string here? Dec 22, 2013 at 16:29
  • 1
    The third argument to open can be a scalar reference, which is useful if you want to treat a string like a file. Also, its probably better to use IO::String instead.
    – Chris
    Dec 22, 2013 at 16:53

1 Answer 1

5

You are suffering from buffering. Add

use IO::Handle qw( );
$handle->autoflush(1);

or close the handle before reading from the buffer.

2
  • Thank you, both your suggestions resolve my issue. Do you know why this is only an issue when specifying an encoding?
    – Chris
    Dec 22, 2013 at 16:43
  • 2
    The encoding layer probably has its own buffer. I wouldn't count on it always being unbuffered without :encoding.
    – ikegami
    Dec 22, 2013 at 18:44

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