You close the output file inside the for
loop. By the second iteration, the file handle has been closed. You have to close the file once the loop has run to completion.
Also, bareword file handles have package scope which comes with all the disadvantages of global variables. Use lexical file handles.
Also, especially if the name of the file you are opening is coming from the outside, use the three argument form of open, and always include the name of the file in error messages.
Finally, presumably, $hash{$i}
contains an array reference, so you have to dereference it if you are going to interpolate its contents into a string.
my $fileoutput = "output.c";
open my $OUTFILE, '>', $fileoutput
or die "Failed to open '$fileoutput': $!";
for my $i (keys %hash) {
#grep for c file output and compare with xml key print both key and values #
if (grep $_ eq $i, @c_result_array) {
if(defined $hash{$i}) {
my @values = @{ $hash{$i} };
print $OUTFILE "$i => @values\n";
}
}
}
close $OUTFILE
or die "Failed to close '$fileoutput': $!";
close
on file handles as Perl will close them for you when the program terminates. If your output data is critical and you want to be sure that it has been written to disk then you canclose
the output filer handle, but you need to check the return status for this to be of any benefit. Alternatively, if you have a program that has a huge number of file handles then it is wasteful to leave them open once you are done with them