This more of a suggestion on how NOT to do it. I've just had a bad time finding a bug in a rather big Perl application. Most of the modules had its own config files. To read the config files as-a-whole, I found this single line of Perl somewhere on the net:
# Bad! Don't do that!
my $content = do{local(@ARGV,$/)=$filename;<>};
It reassigns the line separator as explained before. But it also reassigns the STDIN.
This had at least one side effect that cost me hours to find: It does not close the implicite file handle properly (since it does not call closeat all).
e.g. doing that:
use strict;
use warnings;
my $filename = 'some-file.txt';
my $content = do{local(@ARGV,$/)=$filename;<>};
my $content2 = do{local(@ARGV,$/)=$filename;<>};
my $content3 = do{local(@ARGV,$/)=$filename;<>};
print "After reading a file 3 times redirecting to STDIN: $.\n";
open (FILE, "<", $filename) or die $!;
print "After opening a file using dedicated file handle: $.\n";
while (<FILE>) {
print "read line: $.\n";
}
print "before close: $.\n";
close FILE;
print "after close: $.\n";
results in:
After reading a file 3 times redirecting to STDIN: 3
After opening a file using dedicated file handle: 3
read line: 1
read line: 2
(...)
read line: 46
before close: 46
after close: 0
The strange thing is, that the line counter $. is increased for every file by one. It's not resetted and it does not contain the number of lines. And it is not resetted to zero when opening another file until at least one line is read. In my case, I was doing something like this:
while($. < $skipLines) {<FILE>};
Because of this problem, the condition was false because the line counter was not resetted properly. I don't know if this is a bug or simply wrong code... Also calling close; oder close STDIN; does not help.
I replaced this unreadable code by using open, string concatenation and close. However, the solution posted by Brad Gilbert also works since it uses an explicit file handle instead.
The 3 line at the beginning can be replaced by:
my $content = do{local $/; open(my $f1, '<', $filename) or die $!; my $tmp1 = <$f1>; close $f1 or die $!; $tmp1};
my $content2 = do{local $/; open(my $f2, '<', $filename) or die $!; my $tmp2 = <$f2>; close $f2 or die $!; $tmp2};
my $content3 = do{local $/; open(my $f3, '<', $filename) or die $!; my $tmp3 = <$f3>; close $f3 or die $!; $tmp3};
which properly closes the file handle.