Do not. Never, ever1. Don't you dare, Don't even think of, do not use subroutine prototyping. It is horribly broken (that is, it doesn't do what you think it does) and is dangerous.
Now, we got that out of the way:
Yes, you can do what you want. You can open a file as both read and writable by using the mode <+
. So far, so good.
However, due to buffering, you cannot use the standard read and write methods to read and write to the file. Instead, you need to use sysread and syswrite.
Then, what you need to do is read the line, use sysseek to go back to the start of where you read, and then write to that spot.
Not only is it very complex to do, but it is full of peril. Let's take a simple example. I have a document, and I want to replace my curly quotes with straight quotes.
$line =~ s/“|”/"/g;
That should work. I'm replacing one character with another. What could go wrong?
If this is a UTF-8 file (what Macs and Linux systems use by default), those curly quotes are two-byte characters and that straight quote is a single byte character. I would be writing back a line that was shorter than the line I read in. My buffer is going to be off.
Back in the days when computer memory and storage were measured in kilobytes, and you serial devices like reel-to-reel tapes, this type of operation was quite common. However, in this age where storage is vast, it's simply not worth the complexity and error prone process that this entails. Stick with reading from one file, and writing to another. Then use unlink
and rename
to delete the original and to rename the copy to the original's name.
A few more pointers:
Don't print
if the file can't be opened. Use die
. Otherwise, your program will simply continue on blithely unaware that it is not working. Even better, use the pragma use autodie;, and you won't have to worry about testing whether or not a read/write failed.
Use scalars for file handles.
That is instead of
open OUT, ">my_file.txt";
use
open my $out_fh, ">my_file.txt";
- And, it is highly recommended to use the three parameter open:
Use
open my $out_fh, ">", "my_file.txt";
- If you aren't, always add
use strict;
and use warnings;
.
In fact, your Perl syntax is a bit ancient. You need to get a book on Modern Perl. Perl originally was written as a hack language to replace shell and awk programming. However, Perl has morphed into a full fledge language that can handle complex data types, object orientation, and large projects. Learning the modern syntax of Perl will help you find errors, and become a better developer.
1. Like all rules, this can be broken, but only if you have a clear and careful understanding what is going on. It's like those shows that say "Don't do this at home. We're professionals."
exp
builtin; choose another name for your sub. also, don't use prototypes; they aren't designed to do what prototypes in other languages do and you are better off without them.