Difference between revisions of "File I/O in Perl"
m (File I/O (Perl) moved to File I/O in Perl) |
m |
||
Line 78: | Line 78: | ||
close IN; | close IN; | ||
close OUT; | close OUT; | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Other Methods of File Access == | ||
+ | |||
+ | Here's a quick way to write to a file without using a filehandle. | ||
+ | |||
+ | print `echo "Write this line" > filename.txt"`; | ||
+ | |||
+ | Read without filehandle | ||
+ | |||
+ | $strLines = `cat filename.txt`; | ||
| |
Revision as of 10:22, 12 April 2008
Use a filehandle to open a file in Perl. The filehandle identifier doesn't have a prefix like other Perl identifiers.
To open a file use a FILEHANDLE (a name you decide, all caps isn't a requirement but suggested for clarity) and a FILENAME
open(BOBSFILE, "information.txt");
The above file will be opened for "read" since no i/o type was specified. There are three ways to open a file. This is specified with a symbol before the filename. If no symbol is specified, "read" is assumed.
- read < (open an existing file for read) ex: open BOBSFILE, "<information.txt";
- write > (create a new file to write) ex: open NEWSTORY, ">story.txt";
- append >> (add more to an existing file) ex: open(LOG, ">>activity.log");
open BOBSFILE, "<information.txt"; open NEWSTORY, ">story.txt"; open(LOG, ">>activity.log");
If you open another file using the same FILEHANDLE, Perl will automatically close the previous file and let you use the FILEHANDLE for the new file.
To manually close a FILEHANDLE:
close FILEHANDLE;
Be prepared to deal with uncooperative files.
open(FILEHANDLE, ">bobsinfo.dat") or die("Error");
Web development example.
open (FILE,"$guestbk") || die "Can't Open $guestbk: $!\n";
Open a file to READ
To open a file and read only the first line:
$strVariable = <BOBSFILE>; # remove CR LF $strVariable = chomp($strVariable = );
Read and print all lines as well as number them.
open (FILE,"$guestbk") || die "Can't Open $guestbk: $!\n"; $lnum = 1; while( $line = <FILE> ){ chomp($line); print "$lnum: $line\n"; $lnum++; } close FILE;
Read all lines into an array.
@eachline = <FILE>; chomp(@eachline); print "@eachline";
Open a file to WRITE
Writing to a file overwrites what was in the file previously and writes the new information over it.
open (GUEST,">$guestbk") || die "Can't Open $guestbookreal: $!\n"; print GUEST "<H1>New Guestbook Entry</H1>\n"; print GUEST "$FORM{'realname'}</a></b>"; print GUEST "<b>Time: </b>$date<br>\n"; print GUEST "<b>Comments: </b>$txtComments<br>\n"; close (GUEST);
Read from one file and write its contents into another file.
my $infile = 'bobsbills.txt'; my $outfile = 'bobsexpenses.txt'; open IN, "< $infile" or die "Can't open $infile : $!"; open OUT, "> $outfile" or die "Can't open $outfile : $!"; print OUT <IN>; close IN; close OUT;
Other Methods of File Access
Here's a quick way to write to a file without using a filehandle.
print `echo "Write this line" > filename.txt"`;
Read without filehandle
$strLines = `cat filename.txt`;