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I've got two questions about the Perl open command:

1) I seem to remember from Perl Best Practices that the 3 argument version of open is better than the two argument version, e.g.

open(OUT, '>>', $file);

vs.

open(OUT, ">>$file");

Why is that? I was trying to tell somebody to use the 3 argument version the other day but couldn't seem to back it up with anything.

2) I also seem to remember lexical file handles being favored over non-lexical file handles (they called something different)? And also couldn't remember why, e.g.

open(my $out, '>>', $file);

vs.

open(OUT, '>>', $file);

Is it a strict thing? I seem to remember being able to use OUT with strict but I can't remember.

Thanks, and sorry for asking two questions in one.

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dupe: stackoverflow.com/questions/318789/… – Ether Sep 25 '09 at 23:06
1  
It's because Perl::Critic advices this :) – Alexandr Ciornii Sep 26 '09 at 9:23
2  
Not a dupe, this is asking why it is the best way to do that. – Brad Gilbert Sep 28 '09 at 2:06
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3 Answers

up vote 37 down vote accepted
  • Using typeglobs for filehandles (like OUT) is not a good idea, as they are global across your entire program - you need to be sure that no other routine including those in modules are using the same name (including in the future).
  • Using the two-argument form of open exposes your application to mis-behaviour caused by variables containing special characters, for example my $f; open $f, ">$some_filename"; is exposed to the bug where $some_filename containing a leading > will change the program's behaviour.

Using the three-argument form avoids this by separating the mode and filename into separate arguments where they can't interfere.

Moreover, using the lots-of-arguments form with pipes is a very good idea:

open $pipe, '|-', 'sendmail', 'fred@somewhere.fake';

Is better than doing it all as a single string – it avoids possible shell injection etc.

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1  
Thanks MarkR. That was pretty much EXACTLY the set of answers I was looking for. Glad to know there is actually a legitimate reason for me having it done it that way for the last few years. – Morinar Sep 25 '09 at 22:05
2  
Notes on compatibility: 3-arg open and open my $fh, ... work beginning in 5.6.0. open my $fh, '|-', LIST (list pipe open) works beginning in 5.8.0. – hobbs Sep 29 '09 at 1:40
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Tackling #2:

OUT is a global filehandle and using it exposes you to insidious bugs like this:

sub doSomething {
  my ($input) = @_;
  # let's compare $input to something we read from another file
  open(F, "<", $anotherFile);
  @F = <F>; 
  close F;
  &do_some_comparison($input, @F);
}

open(F, "<", $myfile);
while (<F>) {
    &doSomething($_);   # do'h -- just closed the F filehandle
}
close F;
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Ahh, that's a very solid piece of reasoning. – Morinar Sep 25 '09 at 22:00
1  
Your handles are named inconsistently. – Ether Sep 25 '09 at 23:06
@Ether: I edited mob's answer to consistent-ize the handles. – Paul Nathan Sep 25 '09 at 23:44
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One aspect to keep in mind is that the two-arg form is broken. Consider a file named ' abc' (that is, a file name with a leading blank). You cannot open the file:

open my $foo, ' abc' or die $!;
open my $foo, '< abc' or die $!;
open my $foo, '<  abc' or die $!;
# nothing works

The space gets dropped and so the file can no longer be found. Such a scenario is highly improbable, but definitely a problem. The three-arg form is immune to this:

open my $foo, '<', ' abc' or die $!;
# works

This thread from perlmonks is as good a discussion as any of the issue. Just bear in mind that in 2001, the three-arg form was still considered new, and thus not suitable for portable code, since Perl programs would die with a syntax error if run on a 5.005 interpreter. This is no longer the case: perl 5.005 is beyond deprecated, it is obsolete.

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6  
No, the two-argument form of open, or the one-argument form for that matter, is not broken. It is working as designed, documented, and advertised. It simply may be that magic open isn't what you need. Another plug for three-argument open is that the middle argument can — and often should — include the stream's encoding. – tchrist Oct 30 '10 at 16:23
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