Commit | Line | Data |
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a0d0e21e | 1 | =head1 NAME |
d74e8afc | 2 | X<function> |
a0d0e21e LW |
3 | |
4 | perlfunc - Perl builtin functions | |
5 | ||
6 | =head1 DESCRIPTION | |
7 | ||
8 | The functions in this section can serve as terms in an expression. | |
9 | They fall into two major categories: list operators and named unary | |
10 | operators. These differ in their precedence relationship with a | |
11 | following comma. (See the precedence table in L<perlop>.) List | |
12 | operators take more than one argument, while unary operators can never | |
13 | take more than one argument. Thus, a comma terminates the argument of | |
14 | a unary operator, but merely separates the arguments of a list | |
15 | operator. A unary operator generally provides a scalar context to its | |
2b5ab1e7 | 16 | argument, while a list operator may provide either scalar or list |
a0d0e21e | 17 | contexts for its arguments. If it does both, the scalar arguments will |
5f05dabc | 18 | be first, and the list argument will follow. (Note that there can ever |
0f31cffe | 19 | be only one such list argument.) For instance, splice() has three scalar |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
20 | arguments followed by a list, whereas gethostbyname() has four scalar |
21 | arguments. | |
a0d0e21e LW |
22 | |
23 | In the syntax descriptions that follow, list operators that expect a | |
24 | list (and provide list context for the elements of the list) are shown | |
25 | with LIST as an argument. Such a list may consist of any combination | |
26 | of scalar arguments or list values; the list values will be included | |
27 | in the list as if each individual element were interpolated at that | |
28 | point in the list, forming a longer single-dimensional list value. | |
cf264981 | 29 | Commas should separate elements of the LIST. |
a0d0e21e LW |
30 | |
31 | Any function in the list below may be used either with or without | |
32 | parentheses around its arguments. (The syntax descriptions omit the | |
5f05dabc | 33 | parentheses.) If you use the parentheses, the simple (but occasionally |
19799a22 | 34 | surprising) rule is this: It I<looks> like a function, therefore it I<is> a |
a0d0e21e LW |
35 | function, and precedence doesn't matter. Otherwise it's a list |
36 | operator or unary operator, and precedence does matter. And whitespace | |
37 | between the function and left parenthesis doesn't count--so you need to | |
38 | be careful sometimes: | |
39 | ||
5ed4f2ec | 40 | print 1+2+4; # Prints 7. |
41 | print(1+2) + 4; # Prints 3. | |
42 | print (1+2)+4; # Also prints 3! | |
43 | print +(1+2)+4; # Prints 7. | |
44 | print ((1+2)+4); # Prints 7. | |
a0d0e21e LW |
45 | |
46 | If you run Perl with the B<-w> switch it can warn you about this. For | |
47 | example, the third line above produces: | |
48 | ||
49 | print (...) interpreted as function at - line 1. | |
50 | Useless use of integer addition in void context at - line 1. | |
51 | ||
2b5ab1e7 TC |
52 | A few functions take no arguments at all, and therefore work as neither |
53 | unary nor list operators. These include such functions as C<time> | |
54 | and C<endpwent>. For example, C<time+86_400> always means | |
55 | C<time() + 86_400>. | |
56 | ||
a0d0e21e | 57 | For functions that can be used in either a scalar or list context, |
54310121 | 58 | nonabortive failure is generally indicated in a scalar context by |
a0d0e21e LW |
59 | returning the undefined value, and in a list context by returning the |
60 | null list. | |
61 | ||
5a964f20 TC |
62 | Remember the following important rule: There is B<no rule> that relates |
63 | the behavior of an expression in list context to its behavior in scalar | |
64 | context, or vice versa. It might do two totally different things. | |
a0d0e21e | 65 | Each operator and function decides which sort of value it would be most |
2b5ab1e7 | 66 | appropriate to return in scalar context. Some operators return the |
5a964f20 | 67 | length of the list that would have been returned in list context. Some |
a0d0e21e LW |
68 | operators return the first value in the list. Some operators return the |
69 | last value in the list. Some operators return a count of successful | |
70 | operations. In general, they do what you want, unless you want | |
71 | consistency. | |
d74e8afc | 72 | X<context> |
a0d0e21e | 73 | |
d1be9408 | 74 | A named array in scalar context is quite different from what would at |
5a964f20 TC |
75 | first glance appear to be a list in scalar context. You can't get a list |
76 | like C<(1,2,3)> into being in scalar context, because the compiler knows | |
77 | the context at compile time. It would generate the scalar comma operator | |
78 | there, not the list construction version of the comma. That means it | |
79 | was never a list to start with. | |
80 | ||
81 | In general, functions in Perl that serve as wrappers for system calls | |
f86cebdf | 82 | of the same name (like chown(2), fork(2), closedir(2), etc.) all return |
5a964f20 TC |
83 | true when they succeed and C<undef> otherwise, as is usually mentioned |
84 | in the descriptions below. This is different from the C interfaces, | |
19799a22 GS |
85 | which return C<-1> on failure. Exceptions to this rule are C<wait>, |
86 | C<waitpid>, and C<syscall>. System calls also set the special C<$!> | |
5a964f20 TC |
87 | variable on failure. Other functions do not, except accidentally. |
88 | ||
88e1f1a2 JV |
89 | Extension modules can also hook into the Perl parser to define new |
90 | kinds of keyword-headed expression. These may look like functions, but | |
91 | may also look completely different. The syntax following the keyword | |
92 | is defined entirely by the extension. If you are an implementor, see | |
93 | L<perlapi/PL_keyword_plugin> for the mechanism. If you are using such | |
94 | a module, see the module's documentation for details of the syntax that | |
95 | it defines. | |
96 | ||
cb1a09d0 | 97 | =head2 Perl Functions by Category |
d74e8afc | 98 | X<function> |
cb1a09d0 AD |
99 | |
100 | Here are Perl's functions (including things that look like | |
5a964f20 | 101 | functions, like some keywords and named operators) |
cb1a09d0 AD |
102 | arranged by category. Some functions appear in more |
103 | than one place. | |
104 | ||
13a2d996 | 105 | =over 4 |
cb1a09d0 AD |
106 | |
107 | =item Functions for SCALARs or strings | |
d74e8afc | 108 | X<scalar> X<string> X<character> |
cb1a09d0 | 109 | |
22fae026 | 110 | C<chomp>, C<chop>, C<chr>, C<crypt>, C<hex>, C<index>, C<lc>, C<lcfirst>, |
1dc8ecb8 | 111 | C<length>, C<oct>, C<ord>, C<pack>, C<q//>, C<qq//>, C<reverse>, |
945c54fd | 112 | C<rindex>, C<sprintf>, C<substr>, C<tr///>, C<uc>, C<ucfirst>, C<y///> |
cb1a09d0 AD |
113 | |
114 | =item Regular expressions and pattern matching | |
d74e8afc | 115 | X<regular expression> X<regex> X<regexp> |
cb1a09d0 | 116 | |
ab4f32c2 | 117 | C<m//>, C<pos>, C<quotemeta>, C<s///>, C<split>, C<study>, C<qr//> |
cb1a09d0 AD |
118 | |
119 | =item Numeric functions | |
d74e8afc | 120 | X<numeric> X<number> X<trigonometric> X<trigonometry> |
cb1a09d0 | 121 | |
22fae026 TM |
122 | C<abs>, C<atan2>, C<cos>, C<exp>, C<hex>, C<int>, C<log>, C<oct>, C<rand>, |
123 | C<sin>, C<sqrt>, C<srand> | |
cb1a09d0 AD |
124 | |
125 | =item Functions for real @ARRAYs | |
d74e8afc | 126 | X<array> |
cb1a09d0 | 127 | |
22fae026 | 128 | C<pop>, C<push>, C<shift>, C<splice>, C<unshift> |
cb1a09d0 AD |
129 | |
130 | =item Functions for list data | |
d74e8afc | 131 | X<list> |
cb1a09d0 | 132 | |
1dc8ecb8 | 133 | C<grep>, C<join>, C<map>, C<qw//>, C<reverse>, C<sort>, C<unpack> |
cb1a09d0 AD |
134 | |
135 | =item Functions for real %HASHes | |
d74e8afc | 136 | X<hash> |
cb1a09d0 | 137 | |
22fae026 | 138 | C<delete>, C<each>, C<exists>, C<keys>, C<values> |
cb1a09d0 AD |
139 | |
140 | =item Input and output functions | |
d74e8afc | 141 | X<I/O> X<input> X<output> X<dbm> |
cb1a09d0 | 142 | |
22fae026 TM |
143 | C<binmode>, C<close>, C<closedir>, C<dbmclose>, C<dbmopen>, C<die>, C<eof>, |
144 | C<fileno>, C<flock>, C<format>, C<getc>, C<print>, C<printf>, C<read>, | |
0d863452 | 145 | C<readdir>, C<rewinddir>, C<say>, C<seek>, C<seekdir>, C<select>, C<syscall>, |
22fae026 TM |
146 | C<sysread>, C<sysseek>, C<syswrite>, C<tell>, C<telldir>, C<truncate>, |
147 | C<warn>, C<write> | |
cb1a09d0 AD |
148 | |
149 | =item Functions for fixed length data or records | |
150 | ||
22fae026 | 151 | C<pack>, C<read>, C<syscall>, C<sysread>, C<syswrite>, C<unpack>, C<vec> |
cb1a09d0 AD |
152 | |
153 | =item Functions for filehandles, files, or directories | |
d74e8afc | 154 | X<file> X<filehandle> X<directory> X<pipe> X<link> X<symlink> |
cb1a09d0 | 155 | |
22fae026 | 156 | C<-I<X>>, C<chdir>, C<chmod>, C<chown>, C<chroot>, C<fcntl>, C<glob>, |
5ff3f7a4 | 157 | C<ioctl>, C<link>, C<lstat>, C<mkdir>, C<open>, C<opendir>, |
1e278fd9 JH |
158 | C<readlink>, C<rename>, C<rmdir>, C<stat>, C<symlink>, C<sysopen>, |
159 | C<umask>, C<unlink>, C<utime> | |
cb1a09d0 | 160 | |
cf264981 | 161 | =item Keywords related to the control flow of your Perl program |
d74e8afc | 162 | X<control flow> |
cb1a09d0 | 163 | |
98293880 JH |
164 | C<caller>, C<continue>, C<die>, C<do>, C<dump>, C<eval>, C<exit>, |
165 | C<goto>, C<last>, C<next>, C<redo>, C<return>, C<sub>, C<wantarray> | |
cb1a09d0 | 166 | |
0d863452 RH |
167 | =item Keywords related to switch |
168 | ||
36fb85f3 | 169 | C<break>, C<continue>, C<given>, C<when>, C<default> |
0d863452 RH |
170 | |
171 | (These are only available if you enable the "switch" feature. | |
172 | See L<feature> and L<perlsyn/"Switch statements">.) | |
173 | ||
54310121 | 174 | =item Keywords related to scoping |
cb1a09d0 | 175 | |
36fb85f3 RGS |
176 | C<caller>, C<import>, C<local>, C<my>, C<our>, C<state>, C<package>, |
177 | C<use> | |
178 | ||
179 | (C<state> is only available if the "state" feature is enabled. See | |
180 | L<feature>.) | |
cb1a09d0 AD |
181 | |
182 | =item Miscellaneous functions | |
183 | ||
36fb85f3 | 184 | C<defined>, C<dump>, C<eval>, C<formline>, C<local>, C<my>, C<our>, |
834df1c5 | 185 | C<reset>, C<scalar>, C<state>, C<undef>, C<wantarray> |
cb1a09d0 AD |
186 | |
187 | =item Functions for processes and process groups | |
d74e8afc | 188 | X<process> X<pid> X<process id> |
cb1a09d0 | 189 | |
22fae026 | 190 | C<alarm>, C<exec>, C<fork>, C<getpgrp>, C<getppid>, C<getpriority>, C<kill>, |
1dc8ecb8 | 191 | C<pipe>, C<qx//>, C<setpgrp>, C<setpriority>, C<sleep>, C<system>, |
22fae026 | 192 | C<times>, C<wait>, C<waitpid> |
cb1a09d0 AD |
193 | |
194 | =item Keywords related to perl modules | |
d74e8afc | 195 | X<module> |
cb1a09d0 | 196 | |
22fae026 | 197 | C<do>, C<import>, C<no>, C<package>, C<require>, C<use> |
cb1a09d0 | 198 | |
353c6505 | 199 | =item Keywords related to classes and object-orientation |
d74e8afc | 200 | X<object> X<class> X<package> |
cb1a09d0 | 201 | |
22fae026 TM |
202 | C<bless>, C<dbmclose>, C<dbmopen>, C<package>, C<ref>, C<tie>, C<tied>, |
203 | C<untie>, C<use> | |
cb1a09d0 AD |
204 | |
205 | =item Low-level socket functions | |
d74e8afc | 206 | X<socket> X<sock> |
cb1a09d0 | 207 | |
22fae026 TM |
208 | C<accept>, C<bind>, C<connect>, C<getpeername>, C<getsockname>, |
209 | C<getsockopt>, C<listen>, C<recv>, C<send>, C<setsockopt>, C<shutdown>, | |
737dd4b4 | 210 | C<socket>, C<socketpair> |
cb1a09d0 AD |
211 | |
212 | =item System V interprocess communication functions | |
d74e8afc | 213 | X<IPC> X<System V> X<semaphore> X<shared memory> X<memory> X<message> |
cb1a09d0 | 214 | |
22fae026 TM |
215 | C<msgctl>, C<msgget>, C<msgrcv>, C<msgsnd>, C<semctl>, C<semget>, C<semop>, |
216 | C<shmctl>, C<shmget>, C<shmread>, C<shmwrite> | |
cb1a09d0 AD |
217 | |
218 | =item Fetching user and group info | |
d74e8afc | 219 | X<user> X<group> X<password> X<uid> X<gid> X<passwd> X</etc/passwd> |
cb1a09d0 | 220 | |
22fae026 TM |
221 | C<endgrent>, C<endhostent>, C<endnetent>, C<endpwent>, C<getgrent>, |
222 | C<getgrgid>, C<getgrnam>, C<getlogin>, C<getpwent>, C<getpwnam>, | |
223 | C<getpwuid>, C<setgrent>, C<setpwent> | |
cb1a09d0 AD |
224 | |
225 | =item Fetching network info | |
d74e8afc | 226 | X<network> X<protocol> X<host> X<hostname> X<IP> X<address> X<service> |
cb1a09d0 | 227 | |
22fae026 TM |
228 | C<endprotoent>, C<endservent>, C<gethostbyaddr>, C<gethostbyname>, |
229 | C<gethostent>, C<getnetbyaddr>, C<getnetbyname>, C<getnetent>, | |
230 | C<getprotobyname>, C<getprotobynumber>, C<getprotoent>, | |
231 | C<getservbyname>, C<getservbyport>, C<getservent>, C<sethostent>, | |
232 | C<setnetent>, C<setprotoent>, C<setservent> | |
cb1a09d0 AD |
233 | |
234 | =item Time-related functions | |
d74e8afc | 235 | X<time> X<date> |
cb1a09d0 | 236 | |
22fae026 | 237 | C<gmtime>, C<localtime>, C<time>, C<times> |
cb1a09d0 | 238 | |
37798a01 | 239 | =item Functions new in perl5 |
d74e8afc | 240 | X<perl5> |
37798a01 | 241 | |
834df1c5 SP |
242 | C<abs>, C<bless>, C<break>, C<chomp>, C<chr>, C<continue>, C<default>, |
243 | C<exists>, C<formline>, C<given>, C<glob>, C<import>, C<lc>, C<lcfirst>, | |
1dc8ecb8 | 244 | C<lock>, C<map>, C<my>, C<no>, C<our>, C<prototype>, C<qr//>, C<qw//>, C<qx//>, |
834df1c5 SP |
245 | C<readline>, C<readpipe>, C<ref>, C<sub>*, C<sysopen>, C<tie>, C<tied>, C<uc>, |
246 | C<ucfirst>, C<untie>, C<use>, C<when> | |
37798a01 | 247 | |
248 | * - C<sub> was a keyword in perl4, but in perl5 it is an | |
5a964f20 | 249 | operator, which can be used in expressions. |
37798a01 | 250 | |
251 | =item Functions obsoleted in perl5 | |
252 | ||
22fae026 | 253 | C<dbmclose>, C<dbmopen> |
37798a01 | 254 | |
cb1a09d0 AD |
255 | =back |
256 | ||
60f9f73c | 257 | =head2 Portability |
d74e8afc | 258 | X<portability> X<Unix> X<portable> |
60f9f73c | 259 | |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
260 | Perl was born in Unix and can therefore access all common Unix |
261 | system calls. In non-Unix environments, the functionality of some | |
262 | Unix system calls may not be available, or details of the available | |
263 | functionality may differ slightly. The Perl functions affected | |
60f9f73c JH |
264 | by this are: |
265 | ||
266 | C<-X>, C<binmode>, C<chmod>, C<chown>, C<chroot>, C<crypt>, | |
267 | C<dbmclose>, C<dbmopen>, C<dump>, C<endgrent>, C<endhostent>, | |
268 | C<endnetent>, C<endprotoent>, C<endpwent>, C<endservent>, C<exec>, | |
ef5a6dd7 JH |
269 | C<fcntl>, C<flock>, C<fork>, C<getgrent>, C<getgrgid>, C<gethostbyname>, |
270 | C<gethostent>, C<getlogin>, C<getnetbyaddr>, C<getnetbyname>, C<getnetent>, | |
54d7b083 | 271 | C<getppid>, C<getpgrp>, C<getpriority>, C<getprotobynumber>, |
60f9f73c JH |
272 | C<getprotoent>, C<getpwent>, C<getpwnam>, C<getpwuid>, |
273 | C<getservbyport>, C<getservent>, C<getsockopt>, C<glob>, C<ioctl>, | |
274 | C<kill>, C<link>, C<lstat>, C<msgctl>, C<msgget>, C<msgrcv>, | |
2b5ab1e7 | 275 | C<msgsnd>, C<open>, C<pipe>, C<readlink>, C<rename>, C<select>, C<semctl>, |
60f9f73c JH |
276 | C<semget>, C<semop>, C<setgrent>, C<sethostent>, C<setnetent>, |
277 | C<setpgrp>, C<setpriority>, C<setprotoent>, C<setpwent>, | |
278 | C<setservent>, C<setsockopt>, C<shmctl>, C<shmget>, C<shmread>, | |
737dd4b4 | 279 | C<shmwrite>, C<socket>, C<socketpair>, |
80cbd5ad JH |
280 | C<stat>, C<symlink>, C<syscall>, C<sysopen>, C<system>, |
281 | C<times>, C<truncate>, C<umask>, C<unlink>, | |
2b5ab1e7 | 282 | C<utime>, C<wait>, C<waitpid> |
60f9f73c JH |
283 | |
284 | For more information about the portability of these functions, see | |
285 | L<perlport> and other available platform-specific documentation. | |
286 | ||
cb1a09d0 AD |
287 | =head2 Alphabetical Listing of Perl Functions |
288 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
289 | =over 8 |
290 | ||
5b3c99c0 | 291 | =item -X FILEHANDLE |
d74e8afc ITB |
292 | X<-r>X<-w>X<-x>X<-o>X<-R>X<-W>X<-X>X<-O>X<-e>X<-z>X<-s>X<-f>X<-d>X<-l>X<-p> |
293 | X<-S>X<-b>X<-c>X<-t>X<-u>X<-g>X<-k>X<-T>X<-B>X<-M>X<-A>X<-C> | |
a0d0e21e | 294 | |
5b3c99c0 | 295 | =item -X EXPR |
a0d0e21e | 296 | |
5228a96c SP |
297 | =item -X DIRHANDLE |
298 | ||
5b3c99c0 | 299 | =item -X |
a0d0e21e LW |
300 | |
301 | A file test, where X is one of the letters listed below. This unary | |
5228a96c SP |
302 | operator takes one argument, either a filename, a filehandle, or a dirhandle, |
303 | and tests the associated file to see if something is true about it. If the | |
7660c0ab | 304 | argument is omitted, tests C<$_>, except for C<-t>, which tests STDIN. |
19799a22 | 305 | Unless otherwise documented, it returns C<1> for true and C<''> for false, or |
a0d0e21e | 306 | the undefined value if the file doesn't exist. Despite the funny |
d0821a6a | 307 | names, precedence is the same as any other named unary operator. The |
a0d0e21e LW |
308 | operator may be any of: |
309 | ||
5ed4f2ec | 310 | -r File is readable by effective uid/gid. |
311 | -w File is writable by effective uid/gid. | |
312 | -x File is executable by effective uid/gid. | |
313 | -o File is owned by effective uid. | |
a0d0e21e | 314 | |
5ed4f2ec | 315 | -R File is readable by real uid/gid. |
316 | -W File is writable by real uid/gid. | |
317 | -X File is executable by real uid/gid. | |
318 | -O File is owned by real uid. | |
a0d0e21e | 319 | |
5ed4f2ec | 320 | -e File exists. |
321 | -z File has zero size (is empty). | |
322 | -s File has nonzero size (returns size in bytes). | |
a0d0e21e | 323 | |
5ed4f2ec | 324 | -f File is a plain file. |
325 | -d File is a directory. | |
326 | -l File is a symbolic link. | |
327 | -p File is a named pipe (FIFO), or Filehandle is a pipe. | |
328 | -S File is a socket. | |
329 | -b File is a block special file. | |
330 | -c File is a character special file. | |
331 | -t Filehandle is opened to a tty. | |
a0d0e21e | 332 | |
5ed4f2ec | 333 | -u File has setuid bit set. |
334 | -g File has setgid bit set. | |
335 | -k File has sticky bit set. | |
a0d0e21e | 336 | |
5ed4f2ec | 337 | -T File is an ASCII text file (heuristic guess). |
338 | -B File is a "binary" file (opposite of -T). | |
a0d0e21e | 339 | |
5ed4f2ec | 340 | -M Script start time minus file modification time, in days. |
341 | -A Same for access time. | |
342 | -C Same for inode change time (Unix, may differ for other platforms) | |
a0d0e21e | 343 | |
a0d0e21e LW |
344 | Example: |
345 | ||
346 | while (<>) { | |
a9a5a0dc VP |
347 | chomp; |
348 | next unless -f $_; # ignore specials | |
349 | #... | |
a0d0e21e LW |
350 | } |
351 | ||
5ff3f7a4 GS |
352 | The interpretation of the file permission operators C<-r>, C<-R>, |
353 | C<-w>, C<-W>, C<-x>, and C<-X> is by default based solely on the mode | |
354 | of the file and the uids and gids of the user. There may be other | |
ecae030f MO |
355 | reasons you can't actually read, write, or execute the file: for |
356 | example network filesystem access controls, ACLs (access control lists), | |
357 | read-only filesystems, and unrecognized executable formats. Note | |
358 | that the use of these six specific operators to verify if some operation | |
359 | is possible is usually a mistake, because it may be open to race | |
360 | conditions. | |
5ff3f7a4 | 361 | |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
362 | Also note that, for the superuser on the local filesystems, the C<-r>, |
363 | C<-R>, C<-w>, and C<-W> tests always return 1, and C<-x> and C<-X> return 1 | |
5ff3f7a4 GS |
364 | if any execute bit is set in the mode. Scripts run by the superuser |
365 | may thus need to do a stat() to determine the actual mode of the file, | |
2b5ab1e7 | 366 | or temporarily set their effective uid to something else. |
5ff3f7a4 GS |
367 | |
368 | If you are using ACLs, there is a pragma called C<filetest> that may | |
369 | produce more accurate results than the bare stat() mode bits. | |
5ff3f7a4 GS |
370 | When under the C<use filetest 'access'> the above-mentioned filetests |
371 | will test whether the permission can (not) be granted using the | |
468541a8 | 372 | access() family of system calls. Also note that the C<-x> and C<-X> may |
5ff3f7a4 GS |
373 | under this pragma return true even if there are no execute permission |
374 | bits set (nor any extra execute permission ACLs). This strangeness is | |
ecae030f MO |
375 | due to the underlying system calls' definitions. Note also that, due to |
376 | the implementation of C<use filetest 'access'>, the C<_> special | |
377 | filehandle won't cache the results of the file tests when this pragma is | |
378 | in effect. Read the documentation for the C<filetest> pragma for more | |
379 | information. | |
5ff3f7a4 | 380 | |
a0d0e21e LW |
381 | Note that C<-s/a/b/> does not do a negated substitution. Saying |
382 | C<-exp($foo)> still works as expected, however--only single letters | |
383 | following a minus are interpreted as file tests. | |
384 | ||
385 | The C<-T> and C<-B> switches work as follows. The first block or so of the | |
386 | file is examined for odd characters such as strange control codes or | |
61eff3bc | 387 | characters with the high bit set. If too many strange characters (>30%) |
cf264981 | 388 | are found, it's a C<-B> file; otherwise it's a C<-T> file. Also, any file |
a0d0e21e | 389 | containing null in the first block is considered a binary file. If C<-T> |
9124316e | 390 | or C<-B> is used on a filehandle, the current IO buffer is examined |
19799a22 | 391 | rather than the first block. Both C<-T> and C<-B> return true on a null |
54310121 | 392 | file, or a file at EOF when testing a filehandle. Because you have to |
4633a7c4 LW |
393 | read a file to do the C<-T> test, on most occasions you want to use a C<-f> |
394 | against the file first, as in C<next unless -f $file && -T $file>. | |
a0d0e21e | 395 | |
19799a22 | 396 | If any of the file tests (or either the C<stat> or C<lstat> operators) are given |
28757baa | 397 | the special filehandle consisting of a solitary underline, then the stat |
a0d0e21e LW |
398 | structure of the previous file test (or stat operator) is used, saving |
399 | a system call. (This doesn't work with C<-t>, and you need to remember | |
400 | that lstat() and C<-l> will leave values in the stat structure for the | |
5c9aa243 | 401 | symbolic link, not the real file.) (Also, if the stat buffer was filled by |
cf264981 | 402 | an C<lstat> call, C<-T> and C<-B> will reset it with the results of C<stat _>). |
5c9aa243 | 403 | Example: |
a0d0e21e LW |
404 | |
405 | print "Can do.\n" if -r $a || -w _ || -x _; | |
406 | ||
407 | stat($filename); | |
408 | print "Readable\n" if -r _; | |
409 | print "Writable\n" if -w _; | |
410 | print "Executable\n" if -x _; | |
411 | print "Setuid\n" if -u _; | |
412 | print "Setgid\n" if -g _; | |
413 | print "Sticky\n" if -k _; | |
414 | print "Text\n" if -T _; | |
415 | print "Binary\n" if -B _; | |
416 | ||
fbb0b3b3 RGS |
417 | As of Perl 5.9.1, as a form of purely syntactic sugar, you can stack file |
418 | test operators, in a way that C<-f -w -x $file> is equivalent to | |
cf264981 | 419 | C<-x $file && -w _ && -f _>. (This is only syntax fancy: if you use |
fbb0b3b3 RGS |
420 | the return value of C<-f $file> as an argument to another filetest |
421 | operator, no special magic will happen.) | |
422 | ||
a0d0e21e | 423 | =item abs VALUE |
d74e8afc | 424 | X<abs> X<absolute> |
a0d0e21e | 425 | |
54310121 | 426 | =item abs |
bbce6d69 | 427 | |
a0d0e21e | 428 | Returns the absolute value of its argument. |
7660c0ab | 429 | If VALUE is omitted, uses C<$_>. |
a0d0e21e LW |
430 | |
431 | =item accept NEWSOCKET,GENERICSOCKET | |
d74e8afc | 432 | X<accept> |
a0d0e21e | 433 | |
f86cebdf | 434 | Accepts an incoming socket connect, just as the accept(2) system call |
19799a22 | 435 | does. Returns the packed address if it succeeded, false otherwise. |
2b5ab1e7 | 436 | See the example in L<perlipc/"Sockets: Client/Server Communication">. |
a0d0e21e | 437 | |
8d2a6795 GS |
438 | On systems that support a close-on-exec flag on files, the flag will |
439 | be set for the newly opened file descriptor, as determined by the | |
440 | value of $^F. See L<perlvar/$^F>. | |
441 | ||
a0d0e21e | 442 | =item alarm SECONDS |
d74e8afc ITB |
443 | X<alarm> |
444 | X<SIGALRM> | |
445 | X<timer> | |
a0d0e21e | 446 | |
54310121 | 447 | =item alarm |
bbce6d69 | 448 | |
a0d0e21e | 449 | Arranges to have a SIGALRM delivered to this process after the |
cf264981 | 450 | specified number of wallclock seconds has elapsed. If SECONDS is not |
d400eac8 JH |
451 | specified, the value stored in C<$_> is used. (On some machines, |
452 | unfortunately, the elapsed time may be up to one second less or more | |
453 | than you specified because of how seconds are counted, and process | |
454 | scheduling may delay the delivery of the signal even further.) | |
455 | ||
456 | Only one timer may be counting at once. Each call disables the | |
457 | previous timer, and an argument of C<0> may be supplied to cancel the | |
458 | previous timer without starting a new one. The returned value is the | |
459 | amount of time remaining on the previous timer. | |
a0d0e21e | 460 | |
2bc69794 BS |
461 | For delays of finer granularity than one second, the Time::HiRes module |
462 | (from CPAN, and starting from Perl 5.8 part of the standard | |
463 | distribution) provides ualarm(). You may also use Perl's four-argument | |
464 | version of select() leaving the first three arguments undefined, or you | |
465 | might be able to use the C<syscall> interface to access setitimer(2) if | |
466 | your system supports it. See L<perlfaq8> for details. | |
2b5ab1e7 | 467 | |
68f8bed4 JH |
468 | It is usually a mistake to intermix C<alarm> and C<sleep> calls. |
469 | (C<sleep> may be internally implemented in your system with C<alarm>) | |
a0d0e21e | 470 | |
19799a22 GS |
471 | If you want to use C<alarm> to time out a system call you need to use an |
472 | C<eval>/C<die> pair. You can't rely on the alarm causing the system call to | |
f86cebdf | 473 | fail with C<$!> set to C<EINTR> because Perl sets up signal handlers to |
19799a22 | 474 | restart system calls on some systems. Using C<eval>/C<die> always works, |
5a964f20 | 475 | modulo the caveats given in L<perlipc/"Signals">. |
ff68c719 | 476 | |
477 | eval { | |
a9a5a0dc VP |
478 | local $SIG{ALRM} = sub { die "alarm\n" }; # NB: \n required |
479 | alarm $timeout; | |
480 | $nread = sysread SOCKET, $buffer, $size; | |
481 | alarm 0; | |
ff68c719 | 482 | }; |
ff68c719 | 483 | if ($@) { |
a9a5a0dc | 484 | die unless $@ eq "alarm\n"; # propagate unexpected errors |
5ed4f2ec | 485 | # timed out |
ff68c719 | 486 | } |
487 | else { | |
5ed4f2ec | 488 | # didn't |
ff68c719 | 489 | } |
490 | ||
91d81acc JH |
491 | For more information see L<perlipc>. |
492 | ||
a0d0e21e | 493 | =item atan2 Y,X |
d74e8afc | 494 | X<atan2> X<arctangent> X<tan> X<tangent> |
a0d0e21e LW |
495 | |
496 | Returns the arctangent of Y/X in the range -PI to PI. | |
497 | ||
ca6e1c26 | 498 | For the tangent operation, you may use the C<Math::Trig::tan> |
28757baa | 499 | function, or use the familiar relation: |
500 | ||
501 | sub tan { sin($_[0]) / cos($_[0]) } | |
502 | ||
a1021d57 RGS |
503 | The return value for C<atan2(0,0)> is implementation-defined; consult |
504 | your atan2(3) manpage for more information. | |
bf5f1b4c | 505 | |
a0d0e21e | 506 | =item bind SOCKET,NAME |
d74e8afc | 507 | X<bind> |
a0d0e21e LW |
508 | |
509 | Binds a network address to a socket, just as the bind system call | |
19799a22 | 510 | does. Returns true if it succeeded, false otherwise. NAME should be a |
4633a7c4 LW |
511 | packed address of the appropriate type for the socket. See the examples in |
512 | L<perlipc/"Sockets: Client/Server Communication">. | |
a0d0e21e | 513 | |
fae2c0fb | 514 | =item binmode FILEHANDLE, LAYER |
d74e8afc | 515 | X<binmode> X<binary> X<text> X<DOS> X<Windows> |
1c1fc3ea | 516 | |
a0d0e21e LW |
517 | =item binmode FILEHANDLE |
518 | ||
1cbfc93d NIS |
519 | Arranges for FILEHANDLE to be read or written in "binary" or "text" |
520 | mode on systems where the run-time libraries distinguish between | |
521 | binary and text files. If FILEHANDLE is an expression, the value is | |
522 | taken as the name of the filehandle. Returns true on success, | |
b5fe5ca2 | 523 | otherwise it returns C<undef> and sets C<$!> (errno). |
1cbfc93d | 524 | |
d807c6f4 JH |
525 | On some systems (in general, DOS and Windows-based systems) binmode() |
526 | is necessary when you're not working with a text file. For the sake | |
527 | of portability it is a good idea to always use it when appropriate, | |
528 | and to never use it when it isn't appropriate. Also, people can | |
529 | set their I/O to be by default UTF-8 encoded Unicode, not bytes. | |
530 | ||
531 | In other words: regardless of platform, use binmode() on binary data, | |
532 | like for example images. | |
533 | ||
534 | If LAYER is present it is a single string, but may contain multiple | |
535 | directives. The directives alter the behaviour of the file handle. | |
920f5fe1 | 536 | When LAYER is present using binmode on a text file makes sense. |
d807c6f4 | 537 | |
fae2c0fb | 538 | If LAYER is omitted or specified as C<:raw> the filehandle is made |
0226bbdb NIS |
539 | suitable for passing binary data. This includes turning off possible CRLF |
540 | translation and marking it as bytes (as opposed to Unicode characters). | |
749683d2 | 541 | Note that, despite what may be implied in I<"Programming Perl"> (the |
165a9987 PJ |
542 | Camel) or elsewhere, C<:raw> is I<not> simply the inverse of C<:crlf> |
543 | -- other layers which would affect the binary nature of the stream are | |
0226bbdb NIS |
544 | I<also> disabled. See L<PerlIO>, L<perlrun> and the discussion about the |
545 | PERLIO environment variable. | |
01e6739c | 546 | |
d807c6f4 JH |
547 | The C<:bytes>, C<:crlf>, and C<:utf8>, and any other directives of the |
548 | form C<:...>, are called I/O I<layers>. The C<open> pragma can be used to | |
549 | establish default I/O layers. See L<open>. | |
550 | ||
fae2c0fb RGS |
551 | I<The LAYER parameter of the binmode() function is described as "DISCIPLINE" |
552 | in "Programming Perl, 3rd Edition". However, since the publishing of this | |
553 | book, by many known as "Camel III", the consensus of the naming of this | |
554 | functionality has moved from "discipline" to "layer". All documentation | |
555 | of this version of Perl therefore refers to "layers" rather than to | |
556 | "disciplines". Now back to the regularly scheduled documentation...> | |
557 | ||
6902c96a T |
558 | To mark FILEHANDLE as UTF-8, use C<:utf8> or C<:encoding(utf8)>. |
559 | C<:utf8> just marks the data as UTF-8 without further checking, | |
560 | while C<:encoding(utf8)> checks the data for actually being valid | |
561 | UTF-8. More details can be found in L<PerlIO::encoding>. | |
1cbfc93d | 562 | |
ed53a2bb | 563 | In general, binmode() should be called after open() but before any I/O |
01e6739c NIS |
564 | is done on the filehandle. Calling binmode() will normally flush any |
565 | pending buffered output data (and perhaps pending input data) on the | |
fae2c0fb | 566 | handle. An exception to this is the C<:encoding> layer that |
01e6739c | 567 | changes the default character encoding of the handle, see L<open>. |
fae2c0fb | 568 | The C<:encoding> layer sometimes needs to be called in |
3874323d JH |
569 | mid-stream, and it doesn't flush the stream. The C<:encoding> |
570 | also implicitly pushes on top of itself the C<:utf8> layer because | |
571 | internally Perl will operate on UTF-8 encoded Unicode characters. | |
16fe6d59 | 572 | |
19799a22 | 573 | The operating system, device drivers, C libraries, and Perl run-time |
30168b04 GS |
574 | system all work together to let the programmer treat a single |
575 | character (C<\n>) as the line terminator, irrespective of the external | |
576 | representation. On many operating systems, the native text file | |
577 | representation matches the internal representation, but on some | |
578 | platforms the external representation of C<\n> is made up of more than | |
579 | one character. | |
580 | ||
68bd7414 NIS |
581 | Mac OS, all variants of Unix, and Stream_LF files on VMS use a single |
582 | character to end each line in the external representation of text (even | |
5e12dbfa | 583 | though that single character is CARRIAGE RETURN on Mac OS and LINE FEED |
01e6739c NIS |
584 | on Unix and most VMS files). In other systems like OS/2, DOS and the |
585 | various flavors of MS-Windows your program sees a C<\n> as a simple C<\cJ>, | |
586 | but what's stored in text files are the two characters C<\cM\cJ>. That | |
587 | means that, if you don't use binmode() on these systems, C<\cM\cJ> | |
588 | sequences on disk will be converted to C<\n> on input, and any C<\n> in | |
589 | your program will be converted back to C<\cM\cJ> on output. This is what | |
590 | you want for text files, but it can be disastrous for binary files. | |
30168b04 GS |
591 | |
592 | Another consequence of using binmode() (on some systems) is that | |
593 | special end-of-file markers will be seen as part of the data stream. | |
594 | For systems from the Microsoft family this means that if your binary | |
4375e838 | 595 | data contains C<\cZ>, the I/O subsystem will regard it as the end of |
30168b04 GS |
596 | the file, unless you use binmode(). |
597 | ||
598 | binmode() is not only important for readline() and print() operations, | |
599 | but also when using read(), seek(), sysread(), syswrite() and tell() | |
600 | (see L<perlport> for more details). See the C<$/> and C<$\> variables | |
601 | in L<perlvar> for how to manually set your input and output | |
602 | line-termination sequences. | |
a0d0e21e | 603 | |
4633a7c4 | 604 | =item bless REF,CLASSNAME |
d74e8afc | 605 | X<bless> |
a0d0e21e LW |
606 | |
607 | =item bless REF | |
608 | ||
2b5ab1e7 TC |
609 | This function tells the thingy referenced by REF that it is now an object |
610 | in the CLASSNAME package. If CLASSNAME is omitted, the current package | |
19799a22 | 611 | is used. Because a C<bless> is often the last thing in a constructor, |
2b5ab1e7 | 612 | it returns the reference for convenience. Always use the two-argument |
cf264981 SP |
613 | version if a derived class might inherit the function doing the blessing. |
614 | See L<perltoot> and L<perlobj> for more about the blessing (and blessings) | |
615 | of objects. | |
a0d0e21e | 616 | |
57668c4d | 617 | Consider always blessing objects in CLASSNAMEs that are mixed case. |
2b5ab1e7 | 618 | Namespaces with all lowercase names are considered reserved for |
cf264981 | 619 | Perl pragmata. Builtin types have all uppercase names. To prevent |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
620 | confusion, you may wish to avoid such package names as well. Make sure |
621 | that CLASSNAME is a true value. | |
60ad88b8 GS |
622 | |
623 | See L<perlmod/"Perl Modules">. | |
624 | ||
0d863452 RH |
625 | =item break |
626 | ||
627 | Break out of a C<given()> block. | |
628 | ||
629 | This keyword is enabled by the "switch" feature: see L<feature> | |
630 | for more information. | |
631 | ||
a0d0e21e | 632 | =item caller EXPR |
d74e8afc | 633 | X<caller> X<call stack> X<stack> X<stack trace> |
a0d0e21e LW |
634 | |
635 | =item caller | |
636 | ||
5a964f20 | 637 | Returns the context of the current subroutine call. In scalar context, |
28757baa | 638 | returns the caller's package name if there is a caller, that is, if |
19799a22 | 639 | we're in a subroutine or C<eval> or C<require>, and the undefined value |
5a964f20 | 640 | otherwise. In list context, returns |
a0d0e21e | 641 | |
ee6b43cc | 642 | # 0 1 2 |
748a9306 | 643 | ($package, $filename, $line) = caller; |
a0d0e21e LW |
644 | |
645 | With EXPR, it returns some extra information that the debugger uses to | |
646 | print a stack trace. The value of EXPR indicates how many call frames | |
647 | to go back before the current one. | |
648 | ||
ee6b43cc | 649 | # 0 1 2 3 4 |
f3aa04c2 | 650 | ($package, $filename, $line, $subroutine, $hasargs, |
ee6b43cc | 651 | |
652 | # 5 6 7 8 9 10 | |
b3ca2e83 | 653 | $wantarray, $evaltext, $is_require, $hints, $bitmask, $hinthash) |
ee6b43cc | 654 | = caller($i); |
e7ea3e70 | 655 | |
951ba7fe | 656 | Here $subroutine may be C<(eval)> if the frame is not a subroutine |
19799a22 | 657 | call, but an C<eval>. In such a case additional elements $evaltext and |
7660c0ab | 658 | C<$is_require> are set: C<$is_require> is true if the frame is created by a |
19799a22 | 659 | C<require> or C<use> statement, $evaltext contains the text of the |
277ddfaf | 660 | C<eval EXPR> statement. In particular, for an C<eval BLOCK> statement, |
cc1c2e42 | 661 | $subroutine is C<(eval)>, but $evaltext is undefined. (Note also that |
0fc9dec4 RGS |
662 | each C<use> statement creates a C<require> frame inside an C<eval EXPR> |
663 | frame.) $subroutine may also be C<(unknown)> if this particular | |
664 | subroutine happens to have been deleted from the symbol table. | |
665 | C<$hasargs> is true if a new instance of C<@_> was set up for the frame. | |
666 | C<$hints> and C<$bitmask> contain pragmatic hints that the caller was | |
667 | compiled with. The C<$hints> and C<$bitmask> values are subject to change | |
668 | between versions of Perl, and are not meant for external use. | |
748a9306 | 669 | |
b3ca2e83 NC |
670 | C<$hinthash> is a reference to a hash containing the value of C<%^H> when the |
671 | caller was compiled, or C<undef> if C<%^H> was empty. Do not modify the values | |
672 | of this hash, as they are the actual values stored in the optree. | |
673 | ||
748a9306 | 674 | Furthermore, when called from within the DB package, caller returns more |
7660c0ab | 675 | detailed information: it sets the list variable C<@DB::args> to be the |
54310121 | 676 | arguments with which the subroutine was invoked. |
748a9306 | 677 | |
7660c0ab | 678 | Be aware that the optimizer might have optimized call frames away before |
19799a22 | 679 | C<caller> had a chance to get the information. That means that C<caller(N)> |
7660c0ab | 680 | might not return information about the call frame you expect it do, for |
b76cc8ba | 681 | C<< N > 1 >>. In particular, C<@DB::args> might have information from the |
19799a22 | 682 | previous time C<caller> was called. |
7660c0ab | 683 | |
a0d0e21e | 684 | =item chdir EXPR |
d74e8afc ITB |
685 | X<chdir> |
686 | X<cd> | |
f723aae1 | 687 | X<directory, change> |
a0d0e21e | 688 | |
c4aca7d0 GA |
689 | =item chdir FILEHANDLE |
690 | ||
691 | =item chdir DIRHANDLE | |
692 | ||
ce2984c3 PF |
693 | =item chdir |
694 | ||
ffce7b87 | 695 | Changes the working directory to EXPR, if possible. If EXPR is omitted, |
0bfc1ec4 | 696 | changes to the directory specified by C<$ENV{HOME}>, if set; if not, |
ffce7b87 | 697 | changes to the directory specified by C<$ENV{LOGDIR}>. (Under VMS, the |
b4ad75f0 AMS |
698 | variable C<$ENV{SYS$LOGIN}> is also checked, and used if it is set.) If |
699 | neither is set, C<chdir> does nothing. It returns true upon success, | |
700 | false otherwise. See the example under C<die>. | |
a0d0e21e | 701 | |
c4aca7d0 GA |
702 | On systems that support fchdir, you might pass a file handle or |
703 | directory handle as argument. On systems that don't support fchdir, | |
704 | passing handles produces a fatal error at run time. | |
705 | ||
a0d0e21e | 706 | =item chmod LIST |
d74e8afc | 707 | X<chmod> X<permission> X<mode> |
a0d0e21e LW |
708 | |
709 | Changes the permissions of a list of files. The first element of the | |
4633a7c4 | 710 | list must be the numerical mode, which should probably be an octal |
4ad40acf | 711 | number, and which definitely should I<not> be a string of octal digits: |
2f9daede | 712 | C<0644> is okay, C<'0644'> is not. Returns the number of files |
dc848c6f | 713 | successfully changed. See also L</oct>, if all you have is a string. |
a0d0e21e LW |
714 | |
715 | $cnt = chmod 0755, 'foo', 'bar'; | |
716 | chmod 0755, @executables; | |
f86cebdf GS |
717 | $mode = '0644'; chmod $mode, 'foo'; # !!! sets mode to |
718 | # --w----r-T | |
2f9daede TP |
719 | $mode = '0644'; chmod oct($mode), 'foo'; # this is better |
720 | $mode = 0644; chmod $mode, 'foo'; # this is best | |
a0d0e21e | 721 | |
c4aca7d0 GA |
722 | On systems that support fchmod, you might pass file handles among the |
723 | files. On systems that don't support fchmod, passing file handles | |
345da378 GA |
724 | produces a fatal error at run time. The file handles must be passed |
725 | as globs or references to be recognized. Barewords are considered | |
726 | file names. | |
c4aca7d0 GA |
727 | |
728 | open(my $fh, "<", "foo"); | |
729 | my $perm = (stat $fh)[2] & 07777; | |
730 | chmod($perm | 0600, $fh); | |
731 | ||
ca6e1c26 JH |
732 | You can also import the symbolic C<S_I*> constants from the Fcntl |
733 | module: | |
734 | ||
735 | use Fcntl ':mode'; | |
736 | ||
737 | chmod S_IRWXU|S_IRGRP|S_IXGRP|S_IROTH|S_IXOTH, @executables; | |
738 | # This is identical to the chmod 0755 of the above example. | |
739 | ||
a0d0e21e | 740 | =item chomp VARIABLE |
d74e8afc | 741 | X<chomp> X<INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR> X<$/> X<newline> X<eol> |
a0d0e21e | 742 | |
313c9f5c | 743 | =item chomp( LIST ) |
a0d0e21e LW |
744 | |
745 | =item chomp | |
746 | ||
2b5ab1e7 TC |
747 | This safer version of L</chop> removes any trailing string |
748 | that corresponds to the current value of C<$/> (also known as | |
28757baa | 749 | $INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR in the C<English> module). It returns the total |
750 | number of characters removed from all its arguments. It's often used to | |
751 | remove the newline from the end of an input record when you're worried | |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
752 | that the final record may be missing its newline. When in paragraph |
753 | mode (C<$/ = "">), it removes all trailing newlines from the string. | |
4c5a6083 GS |
754 | When in slurp mode (C<$/ = undef>) or fixed-length record mode (C<$/> is |
755 | a reference to an integer or the like, see L<perlvar>) chomp() won't | |
b76cc8ba | 756 | remove anything. |
19799a22 | 757 | If VARIABLE is omitted, it chomps C<$_>. Example: |
a0d0e21e LW |
758 | |
759 | while (<>) { | |
a9a5a0dc VP |
760 | chomp; # avoid \n on last field |
761 | @array = split(/:/); | |
762 | # ... | |
a0d0e21e LW |
763 | } |
764 | ||
4bf21a6d RD |
765 | If VARIABLE is a hash, it chomps the hash's values, but not its keys. |
766 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
767 | You can actually chomp anything that's an lvalue, including an assignment: |
768 | ||
769 | chomp($cwd = `pwd`); | |
770 | chomp($answer = <STDIN>); | |
771 | ||
772 | If you chomp a list, each element is chomped, and the total number of | |
773 | characters removed is returned. | |
774 | ||
15e44fd8 RGS |
775 | Note that parentheses are necessary when you're chomping anything |
776 | that is not a simple variable. This is because C<chomp $cwd = `pwd`;> | |
777 | is interpreted as C<(chomp $cwd) = `pwd`;>, rather than as | |
778 | C<chomp( $cwd = `pwd` )> which you might expect. Similarly, | |
779 | C<chomp $a, $b> is interpreted as C<chomp($a), $b> rather than | |
780 | as C<chomp($a, $b)>. | |
781 | ||
a0d0e21e | 782 | =item chop VARIABLE |
d74e8afc | 783 | X<chop> |
a0d0e21e | 784 | |
313c9f5c | 785 | =item chop( LIST ) |
a0d0e21e LW |
786 | |
787 | =item chop | |
788 | ||
789 | Chops off the last character of a string and returns the character | |
5b3eff12 | 790 | chopped. It is much more efficient than C<s/.$//s> because it neither |
7660c0ab | 791 | scans nor copies the string. If VARIABLE is omitted, chops C<$_>. |
4bf21a6d RD |
792 | If VARIABLE is a hash, it chops the hash's values, but not its keys. |
793 | ||
5b3eff12 | 794 | You can actually chop anything that's an lvalue, including an assignment. |
a0d0e21e LW |
795 | |
796 | If you chop a list, each element is chopped. Only the value of the | |
19799a22 | 797 | last C<chop> is returned. |
a0d0e21e | 798 | |
19799a22 | 799 | Note that C<chop> returns the last character. To return all but the last |
748a9306 LW |
800 | character, use C<substr($string, 0, -1)>. |
801 | ||
15e44fd8 RGS |
802 | See also L</chomp>. |
803 | ||
a0d0e21e | 804 | =item chown LIST |
d74e8afc | 805 | X<chown> X<owner> X<user> X<group> |
a0d0e21e LW |
806 | |
807 | Changes the owner (and group) of a list of files. The first two | |
19799a22 GS |
808 | elements of the list must be the I<numeric> uid and gid, in that |
809 | order. A value of -1 in either position is interpreted by most | |
810 | systems to leave that value unchanged. Returns the number of files | |
811 | successfully changed. | |
a0d0e21e LW |
812 | |
813 | $cnt = chown $uid, $gid, 'foo', 'bar'; | |
814 | chown $uid, $gid, @filenames; | |
815 | ||
c4aca7d0 GA |
816 | On systems that support fchown, you might pass file handles among the |
817 | files. On systems that don't support fchown, passing file handles | |
345da378 GA |
818 | produces a fatal error at run time. The file handles must be passed |
819 | as globs or references to be recognized. Barewords are considered | |
820 | file names. | |
c4aca7d0 | 821 | |
54310121 | 822 | Here's an example that looks up nonnumeric uids in the passwd file: |
a0d0e21e LW |
823 | |
824 | print "User: "; | |
19799a22 | 825 | chomp($user = <STDIN>); |
5a964f20 | 826 | print "Files: "; |
19799a22 | 827 | chomp($pattern = <STDIN>); |
a0d0e21e LW |
828 | |
829 | ($login,$pass,$uid,$gid) = getpwnam($user) | |
a9a5a0dc | 830 | or die "$user not in passwd file"; |
a0d0e21e | 831 | |
5ed4f2ec | 832 | @ary = glob($pattern); # expand filenames |
a0d0e21e LW |
833 | chown $uid, $gid, @ary; |
834 | ||
54310121 | 835 | On most systems, you are not allowed to change the ownership of the |
4633a7c4 LW |
836 | file unless you're the superuser, although you should be able to change |
837 | the group to any of your secondary groups. On insecure systems, these | |
838 | restrictions may be relaxed, but this is not a portable assumption. | |
19799a22 GS |
839 | On POSIX systems, you can detect this condition this way: |
840 | ||
841 | use POSIX qw(sysconf _PC_CHOWN_RESTRICTED); | |
842 | $can_chown_giveaway = not sysconf(_PC_CHOWN_RESTRICTED); | |
4633a7c4 | 843 | |
a0d0e21e | 844 | =item chr NUMBER |
d74e8afc | 845 | X<chr> X<character> X<ASCII> X<Unicode> |
a0d0e21e | 846 | |
54310121 | 847 | =item chr |
bbce6d69 | 848 | |
a0d0e21e | 849 | Returns the character represented by that NUMBER in the character set. |
a0ed51b3 | 850 | For example, C<chr(65)> is C<"A"> in either ASCII or Unicode, and |
2575c402 | 851 | chr(0x263a) is a Unicode smiley face. |
aaa68c4a | 852 | |
8a064bd6 | 853 | Negative values give the Unicode replacement character (chr(0xfffd)), |
5f0135eb | 854 | except under the L<bytes> pragma, where low eight bits of the value |
8a064bd6 JH |
855 | (truncated to an integer) are used. |
856 | ||
974da8e5 JH |
857 | If NUMBER is omitted, uses C<$_>. |
858 | ||
b76cc8ba | 859 | For the reverse, use L</ord>. |
a0d0e21e | 860 | |
2575c402 JW |
861 | Note that characters from 128 to 255 (inclusive) are by default |
862 | internally not encoded as UTF-8 for backward compatibility reasons. | |
974da8e5 | 863 | |
2575c402 | 864 | See L<perlunicode> for more about Unicode. |
bbce6d69 | 865 | |
a0d0e21e | 866 | =item chroot FILENAME |
d74e8afc | 867 | X<chroot> X<root> |
a0d0e21e | 868 | |
54310121 | 869 | =item chroot |
bbce6d69 | 870 | |
5a964f20 | 871 | This function works like the system call by the same name: it makes the |
4633a7c4 | 872 | named directory the new root directory for all further pathnames that |
951ba7fe | 873 | begin with a C</> by your process and all its children. (It doesn't |
28757baa | 874 | change your current working directory, which is unaffected.) For security |
4633a7c4 | 875 | reasons, this call is restricted to the superuser. If FILENAME is |
19799a22 | 876 | omitted, does a C<chroot> to C<$_>. |
a0d0e21e LW |
877 | |
878 | =item close FILEHANDLE | |
d74e8afc | 879 | X<close> |
a0d0e21e | 880 | |
6a518fbc TP |
881 | =item close |
882 | ||
e0f13c26 RGS |
883 | Closes the file or pipe associated with the file handle, flushes the IO |
884 | buffers, and closes the system file descriptor. Returns true if those | |
885 | operations have succeeded and if no error was reported by any PerlIO | |
886 | layer. Closes the currently selected filehandle if the argument is | |
887 | omitted. | |
fb73857a | 888 | |
889 | You don't have to close FILEHANDLE if you are immediately going to do | |
19799a22 GS |
890 | another C<open> on it, because C<open> will close it for you. (See |
891 | C<open>.) However, an explicit C<close> on an input file resets the line | |
892 | counter (C<$.>), while the implicit close done by C<open> does not. | |
fb73857a | 893 | |
dede8123 RGS |
894 | If the file handle came from a piped open, C<close> will additionally |
895 | return false if one of the other system calls involved fails, or if the | |
fb73857a | 896 | program exits with non-zero status. (If the only problem was that the |
dede8123 | 897 | program exited non-zero, C<$!> will be set to C<0>.) Closing a pipe |
2b5ab1e7 | 898 | also waits for the process executing on the pipe to complete, in case you |
b76cc8ba | 899 | want to look at the output of the pipe afterwards, and |
e5218da5 GA |
900 | implicitly puts the exit status value of that command into C<$?> and |
901 | C<${^CHILD_ERROR_NATIVE}>. | |
5a964f20 | 902 | |
73689b13 GS |
903 | Prematurely closing the read end of a pipe (i.e. before the process |
904 | writing to it at the other end has closed it) will result in a | |
905 | SIGPIPE being delivered to the writer. If the other end can't | |
906 | handle that, be sure to read all the data before closing the pipe. | |
907 | ||
fb73857a | 908 | Example: |
a0d0e21e | 909 | |
fb73857a | 910 | open(OUTPUT, '|sort >foo') # pipe to sort |
911 | or die "Can't start sort: $!"; | |
5ed4f2ec | 912 | #... # print stuff to output |
913 | close OUTPUT # wait for sort to finish | |
fb73857a | 914 | or warn $! ? "Error closing sort pipe: $!" |
915 | : "Exit status $? from sort"; | |
5ed4f2ec | 916 | open(INPUT, 'foo') # get sort's results |
fb73857a | 917 | or die "Can't open 'foo' for input: $!"; |
a0d0e21e | 918 | |
5a964f20 TC |
919 | FILEHANDLE may be an expression whose value can be used as an indirect |
920 | filehandle, usually the real filehandle name. | |
a0d0e21e LW |
921 | |
922 | =item closedir DIRHANDLE | |
d74e8afc | 923 | X<closedir> |
a0d0e21e | 924 | |
19799a22 | 925 | Closes a directory opened by C<opendir> and returns the success of that |
5a964f20 TC |
926 | system call. |
927 | ||
a0d0e21e | 928 | =item connect SOCKET,NAME |
d74e8afc | 929 | X<connect> |
a0d0e21e LW |
930 | |
931 | Attempts to connect to a remote socket, just as the connect system call | |
19799a22 | 932 | does. Returns true if it succeeded, false otherwise. NAME should be a |
4633a7c4 LW |
933 | packed address of the appropriate type for the socket. See the examples in |
934 | L<perlipc/"Sockets: Client/Server Communication">. | |
a0d0e21e | 935 | |
cb1a09d0 | 936 | =item continue BLOCK |
d74e8afc | 937 | X<continue> |
cb1a09d0 | 938 | |
0d863452 RH |
939 | =item continue |
940 | ||
cf264981 SP |
941 | C<continue> is actually a flow control statement rather than a function. If |
942 | there is a C<continue> BLOCK attached to a BLOCK (typically in a C<while> or | |
98293880 JH |
943 | C<foreach>), it is always executed just before the conditional is about to |
944 | be evaluated again, just like the third part of a C<for> loop in C. Thus | |
cb1a09d0 AD |
945 | it can be used to increment a loop variable, even when the loop has been |
946 | continued via the C<next> statement (which is similar to the C C<continue> | |
947 | statement). | |
948 | ||
98293880 | 949 | C<last>, C<next>, or C<redo> may appear within a C<continue> |
19799a22 GS |
950 | block. C<last> and C<redo> will behave as if they had been executed within |
951 | the main block. So will C<next>, but since it will execute a C<continue> | |
1d2dff63 GS |
952 | block, it may be more entertaining. |
953 | ||
954 | while (EXPR) { | |
a9a5a0dc VP |
955 | ### redo always comes here |
956 | do_something; | |
1d2dff63 | 957 | } continue { |
a9a5a0dc VP |
958 | ### next always comes here |
959 | do_something_else; | |
960 | # then back the top to re-check EXPR | |
1d2dff63 GS |
961 | } |
962 | ### last always comes here | |
963 | ||
964 | Omitting the C<continue> section is semantically equivalent to using an | |
19799a22 | 965 | empty one, logically enough. In that case, C<next> goes directly back |
1d2dff63 GS |
966 | to check the condition at the top of the loop. |
967 | ||
0d863452 RH |
968 | If the "switch" feature is enabled, C<continue> is also a |
969 | function that will break out of the current C<when> or C<default> | |
970 | block, and fall through to the next case. See L<feature> and | |
971 | L<perlsyn/"Switch statements"> for more information. | |
972 | ||
973 | ||
a0d0e21e | 974 | =item cos EXPR |
d74e8afc | 975 | X<cos> X<cosine> X<acos> X<arccosine> |
a0d0e21e | 976 | |
d6217f1e GS |
977 | =item cos |
978 | ||
5a964f20 | 979 | Returns the cosine of EXPR (expressed in radians). If EXPR is omitted, |
7660c0ab | 980 | takes cosine of C<$_>. |
a0d0e21e | 981 | |
ca6e1c26 | 982 | For the inverse cosine operation, you may use the C<Math::Trig::acos()> |
28757baa | 983 | function, or use this relation: |
984 | ||
985 | sub acos { atan2( sqrt(1 - $_[0] * $_[0]), $_[0] ) } | |
986 | ||
a0d0e21e | 987 | =item crypt PLAINTEXT,SALT |
d74e8afc | 988 | X<crypt> X<digest> X<hash> X<salt> X<plaintext> X<password> |
f723aae1 | 989 | X<decrypt> X<cryptography> X<passwd> X<encrypt> |
a0d0e21e | 990 | |
ef2e6798 MS |
991 | Creates a digest string exactly like the crypt(3) function in the C |
992 | library (assuming that you actually have a version there that has not | |
bb23f8d1 | 993 | been extirpated as a potential munition). |
ef2e6798 MS |
994 | |
995 | crypt() is a one-way hash function. The PLAINTEXT and SALT is turned | |
996 | into a short string, called a digest, which is returned. The same | |
997 | PLAINTEXT and SALT will always return the same string, but there is no | |
998 | (known) way to get the original PLAINTEXT from the hash. Small | |
999 | changes in the PLAINTEXT or SALT will result in large changes in the | |
1000 | digest. | |
1001 | ||
1002 | There is no decrypt function. This function isn't all that useful for | |
1003 | cryptography (for that, look for F<Crypt> modules on your nearby CPAN | |
1004 | mirror) and the name "crypt" is a bit of a misnomer. Instead it is | |
1005 | primarily used to check if two pieces of text are the same without | |
1006 | having to transmit or store the text itself. An example is checking | |
1007 | if a correct password is given. The digest of the password is stored, | |
cf264981 | 1008 | not the password itself. The user types in a password that is |
ef2e6798 MS |
1009 | crypt()'d with the same salt as the stored digest. If the two digests |
1010 | match the password is correct. | |
1011 | ||
1012 | When verifying an existing digest string you should use the digest as | |
1013 | the salt (like C<crypt($plain, $digest) eq $digest>). The SALT used | |
cf264981 | 1014 | to create the digest is visible as part of the digest. This ensures |
ef2e6798 MS |
1015 | crypt() will hash the new string with the same salt as the digest. |
1016 | This allows your code to work with the standard L<crypt|/crypt> and | |
1017 | with more exotic implementations. In other words, do not assume | |
1018 | anything about the returned string itself, or how many bytes in the | |
1019 | digest matter. | |
85c16d83 JH |
1020 | |
1021 | Traditionally the result is a string of 13 bytes: two first bytes of | |
1022 | the salt, followed by 11 bytes from the set C<[./0-9A-Za-z]>, and only | |
bb23f8d1 | 1023 | the first eight bytes of PLAINTEXT mattered. But alternative |
ef2e6798 | 1024 | hashing schemes (like MD5), higher level security schemes (like C2), |
e1020413 | 1025 | and implementations on non-Unix platforms may produce different |
ef2e6798 | 1026 | strings. |
85c16d83 JH |
1027 | |
1028 | When choosing a new salt create a random two character string whose | |
1029 | characters come from the set C<[./0-9A-Za-z]> (like C<join '', ('.', | |
d3989d75 CW |
1030 | '/', 0..9, 'A'..'Z', 'a'..'z')[rand 64, rand 64]>). This set of |
1031 | characters is just a recommendation; the characters allowed in | |
1032 | the salt depend solely on your system's crypt library, and Perl can't | |
1033 | restrict what salts C<crypt()> accepts. | |
e71965be | 1034 | |
a0d0e21e | 1035 | Here's an example that makes sure that whoever runs this program knows |
cf264981 | 1036 | their password: |
a0d0e21e LW |
1037 | |
1038 | $pwd = (getpwuid($<))[1]; | |
a0d0e21e LW |
1039 | |
1040 | system "stty -echo"; | |
1041 | print "Password: "; | |
e71965be | 1042 | chomp($word = <STDIN>); |
a0d0e21e LW |
1043 | print "\n"; |
1044 | system "stty echo"; | |
1045 | ||
e71965be | 1046 | if (crypt($word, $pwd) ne $pwd) { |
a9a5a0dc | 1047 | die "Sorry...\n"; |
a0d0e21e | 1048 | } else { |
a9a5a0dc | 1049 | print "ok\n"; |
54310121 | 1050 | } |
a0d0e21e | 1051 | |
9f8f0c9d | 1052 | Of course, typing in your own password to whoever asks you |
748a9306 | 1053 | for it is unwise. |
a0d0e21e | 1054 | |
ef2e6798 | 1055 | The L<crypt|/crypt> function is unsuitable for hashing large quantities |
19799a22 | 1056 | of data, not least of all because you can't get the information |
ef2e6798 | 1057 | back. Look at the L<Digest> module for more robust algorithms. |
19799a22 | 1058 | |
f2791508 JH |
1059 | If using crypt() on a Unicode string (which I<potentially> has |
1060 | characters with codepoints above 255), Perl tries to make sense | |
1061 | of the situation by trying to downgrade (a copy of the string) | |
1062 | the string back to an eight-bit byte string before calling crypt() | |
1063 | (on that copy). If that works, good. If not, crypt() dies with | |
1064 | C<Wide character in crypt>. | |
85c16d83 | 1065 | |
aa689395 | 1066 | =item dbmclose HASH |
d74e8afc | 1067 | X<dbmclose> |
a0d0e21e | 1068 | |
19799a22 | 1069 | [This function has been largely superseded by the C<untie> function.] |
a0d0e21e | 1070 | |
aa689395 | 1071 | Breaks the binding between a DBM file and a hash. |
a0d0e21e | 1072 | |
19799a22 | 1073 | =item dbmopen HASH,DBNAME,MASK |
d74e8afc | 1074 | X<dbmopen> X<dbm> X<ndbm> X<sdbm> X<gdbm> |
a0d0e21e | 1075 | |
19799a22 | 1076 | [This function has been largely superseded by the C<tie> function.] |
a0d0e21e | 1077 | |
7b8d334a | 1078 | This binds a dbm(3), ndbm(3), sdbm(3), gdbm(3), or Berkeley DB file to a |
19799a22 GS |
1079 | hash. HASH is the name of the hash. (Unlike normal C<open>, the first |
1080 | argument is I<not> a filehandle, even though it looks like one). DBNAME | |
aa689395 | 1081 | is the name of the database (without the F<.dir> or F<.pag> extension if |
1082 | any). If the database does not exist, it is created with protection | |
19799a22 GS |
1083 | specified by MASK (as modified by the C<umask>). If your system supports |
1084 | only the older DBM functions, you may perform only one C<dbmopen> in your | |
aa689395 | 1085 | program. In older versions of Perl, if your system had neither DBM nor |
19799a22 | 1086 | ndbm, calling C<dbmopen> produced a fatal error; it now falls back to |
aa689395 | 1087 | sdbm(3). |
1088 | ||
1089 | If you don't have write access to the DBM file, you can only read hash | |
1090 | variables, not set them. If you want to test whether you can write, | |
19799a22 | 1091 | either use file tests or try setting a dummy hash entry inside an C<eval>, |
aa689395 | 1092 | which will trap the error. |
a0d0e21e | 1093 | |
19799a22 GS |
1094 | Note that functions such as C<keys> and C<values> may return huge lists |
1095 | when used on large DBM files. You may prefer to use the C<each> | |
a0d0e21e LW |
1096 | function to iterate over large DBM files. Example: |
1097 | ||
1098 | # print out history file offsets | |
1099 | dbmopen(%HIST,'/usr/lib/news/history',0666); | |
1100 | while (($key,$val) = each %HIST) { | |
a9a5a0dc | 1101 | print $key, ' = ', unpack('L',$val), "\n"; |
a0d0e21e LW |
1102 | } |
1103 | dbmclose(%HIST); | |
1104 | ||
cb1a09d0 | 1105 | See also L<AnyDBM_File> for a more general description of the pros and |
184e9718 | 1106 | cons of the various dbm approaches, as well as L<DB_File> for a particularly |
cb1a09d0 | 1107 | rich implementation. |
4633a7c4 | 1108 | |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
1109 | You can control which DBM library you use by loading that library |
1110 | before you call dbmopen(): | |
1111 | ||
1112 | use DB_File; | |
1113 | dbmopen(%NS_Hist, "$ENV{HOME}/.netscape/history.db") | |
a9a5a0dc | 1114 | or die "Can't open netscape history file: $!"; |
2b5ab1e7 | 1115 | |
a0d0e21e | 1116 | =item defined EXPR |
d74e8afc | 1117 | X<defined> X<undef> X<undefined> |
a0d0e21e | 1118 | |
54310121 | 1119 | =item defined |
bbce6d69 | 1120 | |
2f9daede TP |
1121 | Returns a Boolean value telling whether EXPR has a value other than |
1122 | the undefined value C<undef>. If EXPR is not present, C<$_> will be | |
1123 | checked. | |
1124 | ||
1125 | Many operations return C<undef> to indicate failure, end of file, | |
1126 | system error, uninitialized variable, and other exceptional | |
1127 | conditions. This function allows you to distinguish C<undef> from | |
1128 | other values. (A simple Boolean test will not distinguish among | |
7660c0ab | 1129 | C<undef>, zero, the empty string, and C<"0">, which are all equally |
2f9daede | 1130 | false.) Note that since C<undef> is a valid scalar, its presence |
19799a22 | 1131 | doesn't I<necessarily> indicate an exceptional condition: C<pop> |
2f9daede TP |
1132 | returns C<undef> when its argument is an empty array, I<or> when the |
1133 | element to return happens to be C<undef>. | |
1134 | ||
f10b0346 GS |
1135 | You may also use C<defined(&func)> to check whether subroutine C<&func> |
1136 | has ever been defined. The return value is unaffected by any forward | |
04891299 | 1137 | declarations of C<&func>. Note that a subroutine which is not defined |
847c7ebe DD |
1138 | may still be callable: its package may have an C<AUTOLOAD> method that |
1139 | makes it spring into existence the first time that it is called -- see | |
1140 | L<perlsub>. | |
f10b0346 GS |
1141 | |
1142 | Use of C<defined> on aggregates (hashes and arrays) is deprecated. It | |
1143 | used to report whether memory for that aggregate has ever been | |
1144 | allocated. This behavior may disappear in future versions of Perl. | |
1145 | You should instead use a simple test for size: | |
1146 | ||
1147 | if (@an_array) { print "has array elements\n" } | |
1148 | if (%a_hash) { print "has hash members\n" } | |
2f9daede TP |
1149 | |
1150 | When used on a hash element, it tells you whether the value is defined, | |
dc848c6f | 1151 | not whether the key exists in the hash. Use L</exists> for the latter |
2f9daede | 1152 | purpose. |
a0d0e21e LW |
1153 | |
1154 | Examples: | |
1155 | ||
1156 | print if defined $switch{'D'}; | |
1157 | print "$val\n" while defined($val = pop(@ary)); | |
1158 | die "Can't readlink $sym: $!" | |
a9a5a0dc | 1159 | unless defined($value = readlink $sym); |
a0d0e21e | 1160 | sub foo { defined &$bar ? &$bar(@_) : die "No bar"; } |
2f9daede | 1161 | $debugging = 0 unless defined $debugging; |
a0d0e21e | 1162 | |
19799a22 | 1163 | Note: Many folks tend to overuse C<defined>, and then are surprised to |
7660c0ab | 1164 | discover that the number C<0> and C<""> (the zero-length string) are, in fact, |
2f9daede | 1165 | defined values. For example, if you say |
a5f75d66 AD |
1166 | |
1167 | "ab" =~ /a(.*)b/; | |
1168 | ||
7660c0ab | 1169 | The pattern match succeeds, and C<$1> is defined, despite the fact that it |
cf264981 | 1170 | matched "nothing". It didn't really fail to match anything. Rather, it |
2b5ab1e7 | 1171 | matched something that happened to be zero characters long. This is all |
a5f75d66 | 1172 | very above-board and honest. When a function returns an undefined value, |
2f9daede | 1173 | it's an admission that it couldn't give you an honest answer. So you |
19799a22 | 1174 | should use C<defined> only when you're questioning the integrity of what |
7660c0ab | 1175 | you're trying to do. At other times, a simple comparison to C<0> or C<""> is |
2f9daede TP |
1176 | what you want. |
1177 | ||
dc848c6f | 1178 | See also L</undef>, L</exists>, L</ref>. |
2f9daede | 1179 | |
a0d0e21e | 1180 | =item delete EXPR |
d74e8afc | 1181 | X<delete> |
a0d0e21e | 1182 | |
01020589 GS |
1183 | Given an expression that specifies a hash element, array element, hash slice, |
1184 | or array slice, deletes the specified element(s) from the hash or array. | |
8216c1fd | 1185 | In the case of an array, if the array elements happen to be at the end, |
b76cc8ba | 1186 | the size of the array will shrink to the highest element that tests |
8216c1fd | 1187 | true for exists() (or 0 if no such element exists). |
a0d0e21e | 1188 | |
eba0920a EM |
1189 | Returns a list with the same number of elements as the number of elements |
1190 | for which deletion was attempted. Each element of that list consists of | |
1191 | either the value of the element deleted, or the undefined value. In scalar | |
1192 | context, this means that you get the value of the last element deleted (or | |
1193 | the undefined value if that element did not exist). | |
1194 | ||
1195 | %hash = (foo => 11, bar => 22, baz => 33); | |
1196 | $scalar = delete $hash{foo}; # $scalar is 11 | |
1197 | $scalar = delete @hash{qw(foo bar)}; # $scalar is 22 | |
1198 | @array = delete @hash{qw(foo bar baz)}; # @array is (undef,undef,33) | |
1199 | ||
1200 | Deleting from C<%ENV> modifies the environment. Deleting from | |
01020589 GS |
1201 | a hash tied to a DBM file deletes the entry from the DBM file. Deleting |
1202 | from a C<tie>d hash or array may not necessarily return anything. | |
1203 | ||
8ea97a1e GS |
1204 | Deleting an array element effectively returns that position of the array |
1205 | to its initial, uninitialized state. Subsequently testing for the same | |
cf264981 SP |
1206 | element with exists() will return false. Also, deleting array elements |
1207 | in the middle of an array will not shift the index of the elements | |
1208 | after them down. Use splice() for that. See L</exists>. | |
8ea97a1e | 1209 | |
01020589 | 1210 | The following (inefficiently) deletes all the values of %HASH and @ARRAY: |
a0d0e21e | 1211 | |
5f05dabc | 1212 | foreach $key (keys %HASH) { |
a9a5a0dc | 1213 | delete $HASH{$key}; |
a0d0e21e LW |
1214 | } |
1215 | ||
01020589 | 1216 | foreach $index (0 .. $#ARRAY) { |
a9a5a0dc | 1217 | delete $ARRAY[$index]; |
01020589 GS |
1218 | } |
1219 | ||
1220 | And so do these: | |
5f05dabc | 1221 | |
01020589 GS |
1222 | delete @HASH{keys %HASH}; |
1223 | ||
9740c838 | 1224 | delete @ARRAY[0 .. $#ARRAY]; |
5f05dabc | 1225 | |
2b5ab1e7 | 1226 | But both of these are slower than just assigning the empty list |
01020589 GS |
1227 | or undefining %HASH or @ARRAY: |
1228 | ||
5ed4f2ec | 1229 | %HASH = (); # completely empty %HASH |
1230 | undef %HASH; # forget %HASH ever existed | |
2b5ab1e7 | 1231 | |
5ed4f2ec | 1232 | @ARRAY = (); # completely empty @ARRAY |
1233 | undef @ARRAY; # forget @ARRAY ever existed | |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
1234 | |
1235 | Note that the EXPR can be arbitrarily complicated as long as the final | |
01020589 GS |
1236 | operation is a hash element, array element, hash slice, or array slice |
1237 | lookup: | |
a0d0e21e LW |
1238 | |
1239 | delete $ref->[$x][$y]{$key}; | |
5f05dabc | 1240 | delete @{$ref->[$x][$y]}{$key1, $key2, @morekeys}; |
a0d0e21e | 1241 | |
01020589 GS |
1242 | delete $ref->[$x][$y][$index]; |
1243 | delete @{$ref->[$x][$y]}[$index1, $index2, @moreindices]; | |
1244 | ||
d361fafa VP |
1245 | The C<delete local EXPR> construct can also be used to localize the deletion |
1246 | of array/hash elements to the current block. | |
1247 | See L<perlsub/"Localized deletion of elements of composite types">. | |
1248 | ||
a0d0e21e | 1249 | =item die LIST |
d74e8afc | 1250 | X<die> X<throw> X<exception> X<raise> X<$@> X<abort> |
a0d0e21e | 1251 | |
19799a22 GS |
1252 | Outside an C<eval>, prints the value of LIST to C<STDERR> and |
1253 | exits with the current value of C<$!> (errno). If C<$!> is C<0>, | |
61eff3bc JH |
1254 | exits with the value of C<<< ($? >> 8) >>> (backtick `command` |
1255 | status). If C<<< ($? >> 8) >>> is C<0>, exits with C<255>. Inside | |
19799a22 GS |
1256 | an C<eval(),> the error message is stuffed into C<$@> and the |
1257 | C<eval> is terminated with the undefined value. This makes | |
1258 | C<die> the way to raise an exception. | |
a0d0e21e LW |
1259 | |
1260 | Equivalent examples: | |
1261 | ||
1262 | die "Can't cd to spool: $!\n" unless chdir '/usr/spool/news'; | |
54310121 | 1263 | chdir '/usr/spool/news' or die "Can't cd to spool: $!\n" |
a0d0e21e | 1264 | |
ccac6780 | 1265 | If the last element of LIST does not end in a newline, the current |
df37ec69 WW |
1266 | script line number and input line number (if any) are also printed, |
1267 | and a newline is supplied. Note that the "input line number" (also | |
1268 | known as "chunk") is subject to whatever notion of "line" happens to | |
1269 | be currently in effect, and is also available as the special variable | |
1270 | C<$.>. See L<perlvar/"$/"> and L<perlvar/"$.">. | |
1271 | ||
1272 | Hint: sometimes appending C<", stopped"> to your message will cause it | |
1273 | to make better sense when the string C<"at foo line 123"> is appended. | |
1274 | Suppose you are running script "canasta". | |
a0d0e21e LW |
1275 | |
1276 | die "/etc/games is no good"; | |
1277 | die "/etc/games is no good, stopped"; | |
1278 | ||
1279 | produce, respectively | |
1280 | ||
1281 | /etc/games is no good at canasta line 123. | |
1282 | /etc/games is no good, stopped at canasta line 123. | |
1283 | ||
2b5ab1e7 | 1284 | See also exit(), warn(), and the Carp module. |
a0d0e21e | 1285 | |
a96d0188 | 1286 | If the output is empty and C<$@> already contains a value (typically from a |
7660c0ab | 1287 | previous eval) that value is reused after appending C<"\t...propagated">. |
fb73857a | 1288 | This is useful for propagating exceptions: |
1289 | ||
1290 | eval { ... }; | |
1291 | die unless $@ =~ /Expected exception/; | |
1292 | ||
a96d0188 | 1293 | If the output is empty and C<$@> contains an object reference that has a |
ad216e65 JH |
1294 | C<PROPAGATE> method, that method will be called with additional file |
1295 | and line number parameters. The return value replaces the value in | |
28a5cf3b | 1296 | C<$@>. i.e. as if C<< $@ = eval { $@->PROPAGATE(__FILE__, __LINE__) }; >> |
ad216e65 JH |
1297 | were called. |
1298 | ||
7660c0ab | 1299 | If C<$@> is empty then the string C<"Died"> is used. |
fb73857a | 1300 | |
52531d10 GS |
1301 | die() can also be called with a reference argument. If this happens to be |
1302 | trapped within an eval(), $@ contains the reference. This behavior permits | |
1303 | a more elaborate exception handling implementation using objects that | |
4375e838 | 1304 | maintain arbitrary state about the nature of the exception. Such a scheme |
52531d10 | 1305 | is sometimes preferable to matching particular string values of $@ using |
746d7dd7 GL |
1306 | regular expressions. Because $@ is a global variable, and eval() may be |
1307 | used within object implementations, care must be taken that analyzing the | |
1308 | error object doesn't replace the reference in the global variable. The | |
1309 | easiest solution is to make a local copy of the reference before doing | |
1310 | other manipulations. Here's an example: | |
52531d10 | 1311 | |
da279afe | 1312 | use Scalar::Util 'blessed'; |
1313 | ||
52531d10 | 1314 | eval { ... ; die Some::Module::Exception->new( FOO => "bar" ) }; |
746d7dd7 GL |
1315 | if (my $ev_err = $@) { |
1316 | if (blessed($ev_err) && $ev_err->isa("Some::Module::Exception")) { | |
52531d10 GS |
1317 | # handle Some::Module::Exception |
1318 | } | |
1319 | else { | |
1320 | # handle all other possible exceptions | |
1321 | } | |
1322 | } | |
1323 | ||
19799a22 | 1324 | Because perl will stringify uncaught exception messages before displaying |
52531d10 GS |
1325 | them, you may want to overload stringification operations on such custom |
1326 | exception objects. See L<overload> for details about that. | |
1327 | ||
19799a22 GS |
1328 | You can arrange for a callback to be run just before the C<die> |
1329 | does its deed, by setting the C<$SIG{__DIE__}> hook. The associated | |
1330 | handler will be called with the error text and can change the error | |
1331 | message, if it sees fit, by calling C<die> again. See | |
1332 | L<perlvar/$SIG{expr}> for details on setting C<%SIG> entries, and | |
cf264981 | 1333 | L<"eval BLOCK"> for some examples. Although this feature was |
19799a22 GS |
1334 | to be run only right before your program was to exit, this is not |
1335 | currently the case--the C<$SIG{__DIE__}> hook is currently called | |
1336 | even inside eval()ed blocks/strings! If one wants the hook to do | |
1337 | nothing in such situations, put | |
fb73857a | 1338 | |
5ed4f2ec | 1339 | die @_ if $^S; |
fb73857a | 1340 | |
19799a22 GS |
1341 | as the first line of the handler (see L<perlvar/$^S>). Because |
1342 | this promotes strange action at a distance, this counterintuitive | |
b76cc8ba | 1343 | behavior may be fixed in a future release. |
774d564b | 1344 | |
a0d0e21e | 1345 | =item do BLOCK |
d74e8afc | 1346 | X<do> X<block> |
a0d0e21e LW |
1347 | |
1348 | Not really a function. Returns the value of the last command in the | |
6b275a1f RGS |
1349 | sequence of commands indicated by BLOCK. When modified by the C<while> or |
1350 | C<until> loop modifier, executes the BLOCK once before testing the loop | |
1351 | condition. (On other statements the loop modifiers test the conditional | |
1352 | first.) | |
a0d0e21e | 1353 | |
4968c1e4 | 1354 | C<do BLOCK> does I<not> count as a loop, so the loop control statements |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
1355 | C<next>, C<last>, or C<redo> cannot be used to leave or restart the block. |
1356 | See L<perlsyn> for alternative strategies. | |
4968c1e4 | 1357 | |
a0d0e21e | 1358 | =item do SUBROUTINE(LIST) |
d74e8afc | 1359 | X<do> |
a0d0e21e | 1360 | |
cf264981 | 1361 | This form of subroutine call is deprecated. See L<perlsub>. |
a0d0e21e LW |
1362 | |
1363 | =item do EXPR | |
d74e8afc | 1364 | X<do> |
a0d0e21e LW |
1365 | |
1366 | Uses the value of EXPR as a filename and executes the contents of the | |
ea63ef19 | 1367 | file as a Perl script. |
a0d0e21e LW |
1368 | |
1369 | do 'stat.pl'; | |
1370 | ||
1371 | is just like | |
1372 | ||
986b19de | 1373 | eval `cat stat.pl`; |
a0d0e21e | 1374 | |
2b5ab1e7 | 1375 | except that it's more efficient and concise, keeps track of the current |
ea63ef19 | 1376 | filename for error messages, searches the @INC directories, and updates |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
1377 | C<%INC> if the file is found. See L<perlvar/Predefined Names> for these |
1378 | variables. It also differs in that code evaluated with C<do FILENAME> | |
1379 | cannot see lexicals in the enclosing scope; C<eval STRING> does. It's the | |
1380 | same, however, in that it does reparse the file every time you call it, | |
1381 | so you probably don't want to do this inside a loop. | |
a0d0e21e | 1382 | |
8e30cc93 | 1383 | If C<do> cannot read the file, it returns undef and sets C<$!> to the |
2b5ab1e7 | 1384 | error. If C<do> can read the file but cannot compile it, it |
8e30cc93 MG |
1385 | returns undef and sets an error message in C<$@>. If the file is |
1386 | successfully compiled, C<do> returns the value of the last expression | |
1387 | evaluated. | |
1388 | ||
a0d0e21e | 1389 | Note that inclusion of library modules is better done with the |
19799a22 | 1390 | C<use> and C<require> operators, which also do automatic error checking |
4633a7c4 | 1391 | and raise an exception if there's a problem. |
a0d0e21e | 1392 | |
5a964f20 TC |
1393 | You might like to use C<do> to read in a program configuration |
1394 | file. Manual error checking can be done this way: | |
1395 | ||
b76cc8ba | 1396 | # read in config files: system first, then user |
f86cebdf | 1397 | for $file ("/share/prog/defaults.rc", |
b76cc8ba | 1398 | "$ENV{HOME}/.someprogrc") |
a9a5a0dc VP |
1399 | { |
1400 | unless ($return = do $file) { | |
1401 | warn "couldn't parse $file: $@" if $@; | |
1402 | warn "couldn't do $file: $!" unless defined $return; | |
1403 | warn "couldn't run $file" unless $return; | |
1404 | } | |
5a964f20 TC |
1405 | } |
1406 | ||
a0d0e21e | 1407 | =item dump LABEL |
d74e8afc | 1408 | X<dump> X<core> X<undump> |
a0d0e21e | 1409 | |
1614b0e3 JD |
1410 | =item dump |
1411 | ||
19799a22 GS |
1412 | This function causes an immediate core dump. See also the B<-u> |
1413 | command-line switch in L<perlrun>, which does the same thing. | |
1414 | Primarily this is so that you can use the B<undump> program (not | |
1415 | supplied) to turn your core dump into an executable binary after | |
1416 | having initialized all your variables at the beginning of the | |
1417 | program. When the new binary is executed it will begin by executing | |
1418 | a C<goto LABEL> (with all the restrictions that C<goto> suffers). | |
1419 | Think of it as a goto with an intervening core dump and reincarnation. | |
1420 | If C<LABEL> is omitted, restarts the program from the top. | |
1421 | ||
1422 | B<WARNING>: Any files opened at the time of the dump will I<not> | |
1423 | be open any more when the program is reincarnated, with possible | |
b76cc8ba | 1424 | resulting confusion on the part of Perl. |
19799a22 | 1425 | |
59f521f4 RGS |
1426 | This function is now largely obsolete, mostly because it's very hard to |
1427 | convert a core file into an executable. That's why you should now invoke | |
1428 | it as C<CORE::dump()>, if you don't want to be warned against a possible | |
ac206dc8 | 1429 | typo. |
19799a22 | 1430 | |
aa689395 | 1431 | =item each HASH |
d74e8afc | 1432 | X<each> X<hash, iterator> |
aa689395 | 1433 | |
aeedbbed NC |
1434 | =item each ARRAY |
1435 | X<array, iterator> | |
1436 | ||
5a964f20 | 1437 | When called in list context, returns a 2-element list consisting of the |
aeedbbed NC |
1438 | key and value for the next element of a hash, or the index and value for |
1439 | the next element of an array, so that you can iterate over it. When called | |
1440 | in scalar context, returns only the key for the next element in the hash | |
1441 | (or the index for an array). | |
2f9daede | 1442 | |
aeedbbed | 1443 | Hash entries are returned in an apparently random order. The actual random |
504f80c1 JH |
1444 | order is subject to change in future versions of perl, but it is |
1445 | guaranteed to be in the same order as either the C<keys> or C<values> | |
4546b9e6 | 1446 | function would produce on the same (unmodified) hash. Since Perl |
22883ac5 | 1447 | 5.8.2 the ordering can be different even between different runs of Perl |
4546b9e6 | 1448 | for security reasons (see L<perlsec/"Algorithmic Complexity Attacks">). |
ab192400 | 1449 | |
aeedbbed NC |
1450 | When the hash or array is entirely read, a null array is returned in list |
1451 | context (which when assigned produces a false (C<0>) value), and C<undef> in | |
19799a22 | 1452 | scalar context. The next call to C<each> after that will start iterating |
aeedbbed NC |
1453 | again. There is a single iterator for each hash or array, shared by all |
1454 | C<each>, C<keys>, and C<values> function calls in the program; it can be | |
1455 | reset by reading all the elements from the hash or array, or by evaluating | |
1456 | C<keys HASH>, C<values HASH>, C<keys ARRAY>, or C<values ARRAY>. If you add | |
1457 | or delete elements of a hash while you're | |
74fc8b5f MJD |
1458 | iterating over it, you may get entries skipped or duplicated, so |
1459 | don't. Exception: It is always safe to delete the item most recently | |
1460 | returned by C<each()>, which means that the following code will work: | |
1461 | ||
1462 | while (($key, $value) = each %hash) { | |
1463 | print $key, "\n"; | |
1464 | delete $hash{$key}; # This is safe | |
1465 | } | |
aa689395 | 1466 | |
f86cebdf | 1467 | The following prints out your environment like the printenv(1) program, |
aa689395 | 1468 | only in a different order: |
a0d0e21e LW |
1469 | |
1470 | while (($key,$value) = each %ENV) { | |
a9a5a0dc | 1471 | print "$key=$value\n"; |
a0d0e21e LW |
1472 | } |
1473 | ||
19799a22 | 1474 | See also C<keys>, C<values> and C<sort>. |
a0d0e21e LW |
1475 | |
1476 | =item eof FILEHANDLE | |
d74e8afc ITB |
1477 | X<eof> |
1478 | X<end of file> | |
1479 | X<end-of-file> | |
a0d0e21e | 1480 | |
4633a7c4 LW |
1481 | =item eof () |
1482 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
1483 | =item eof |
1484 | ||
1485 | Returns 1 if the next read on FILEHANDLE will return end of file, or if | |
1486 | FILEHANDLE is not open. FILEHANDLE may be an expression whose value | |
5a964f20 | 1487 | gives the real filehandle. (Note that this function actually |
19799a22 | 1488 | reads a character and then C<ungetc>s it, so isn't very useful in an |
748a9306 | 1489 | interactive context.) Do not read from a terminal file (or call |
19799a22 | 1490 | C<eof(FILEHANDLE)> on it) after end-of-file is reached. File types such |
748a9306 LW |
1491 | as terminals may lose the end-of-file condition if you do. |
1492 | ||
820475bd GS |
1493 | An C<eof> without an argument uses the last file read. Using C<eof()> |
1494 | with empty parentheses is very different. It refers to the pseudo file | |
1495 | formed from the files listed on the command line and accessed via the | |
61eff3bc JH |
1496 | C<< <> >> operator. Since C<< <> >> isn't explicitly opened, |
1497 | as a normal filehandle is, an C<eof()> before C<< <> >> has been | |
820475bd | 1498 | used will cause C<@ARGV> to be examined to determine if input is |
67408cae | 1499 | available. Similarly, an C<eof()> after C<< <> >> has returned |
efdd0218 RB |
1500 | end-of-file will assume you are processing another C<@ARGV> list, |
1501 | and if you haven't set C<@ARGV>, will read input from C<STDIN>; | |
1502 | see L<perlop/"I/O Operators">. | |
820475bd | 1503 | |
61eff3bc | 1504 | In a C<< while (<>) >> loop, C<eof> or C<eof(ARGV)> can be used to |
820475bd GS |
1505 | detect the end of each file, C<eof()> will only detect the end of the |
1506 | last file. Examples: | |
a0d0e21e | 1507 | |
748a9306 LW |
1508 | # reset line numbering on each input file |
1509 | while (<>) { | |
a9a5a0dc VP |
1510 | next if /^\s*#/; # skip comments |
1511 | print "$.\t$_"; | |
5a964f20 | 1512 | } continue { |
a9a5a0dc | 1513 | close ARGV if eof; # Not eof()! |
748a9306 LW |
1514 | } |
1515 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
1516 | # insert dashes just before last line of last file |
1517 | while (<>) { | |
a9a5a0dc VP |
1518 | if (eof()) { # check for end of last file |
1519 | print "--------------\n"; | |
1520 | } | |
1521 | print; | |
1522 | last if eof(); # needed if we're reading from a terminal | |
a0d0e21e LW |
1523 | } |
1524 | ||
a0d0e21e | 1525 | Practical hint: you almost never need to use C<eof> in Perl, because the |
3ce0d271 GS |
1526 | input operators typically return C<undef> when they run out of data, or if |
1527 | there was an error. | |
a0d0e21e LW |
1528 | |
1529 | =item eval EXPR | |
d74e8afc | 1530 | X<eval> X<try> X<catch> X<evaluate> X<parse> X<execute> |
f723aae1 | 1531 | X<error, handling> X<exception, handling> |
a0d0e21e LW |
1532 | |
1533 | =item eval BLOCK | |
1534 | ||
ce2984c3 PF |
1535 | =item eval |
1536 | ||
c7cc6f1c GS |
1537 | In the first form, the return value of EXPR is parsed and executed as if it |
1538 | were a little Perl program. The value of the expression (which is itself | |
5a964f20 | 1539 | determined within scalar context) is first parsed, and if there weren't any |
be3174d2 GS |
1540 | errors, executed in the lexical context of the current Perl program, so |
1541 | that any variable settings or subroutine and format definitions remain | |
cf264981 | 1542 | afterwards. Note that the value is parsed every time the C<eval> executes. |
be3174d2 GS |
1543 | If EXPR is omitted, evaluates C<$_>. This form is typically used to |
1544 | delay parsing and subsequent execution of the text of EXPR until run time. | |
c7cc6f1c GS |
1545 | |
1546 | In the second form, the code within the BLOCK is parsed only once--at the | |
cf264981 | 1547 | same time the code surrounding the C<eval> itself was parsed--and executed |
c7cc6f1c GS |
1548 | within the context of the current Perl program. This form is typically |
1549 | used to trap exceptions more efficiently than the first (see below), while | |
1550 | also providing the benefit of checking the code within BLOCK at compile | |
1551 | time. | |
1552 | ||
1553 | The final semicolon, if any, may be omitted from the value of EXPR or within | |
1554 | the BLOCK. | |
1555 | ||
1556 | In both forms, the value returned is the value of the last expression | |
5a964f20 | 1557 | evaluated inside the mini-program; a return statement may be also used, just |
c7cc6f1c | 1558 | as with subroutines. The expression providing the return value is evaluated |
cf264981 SP |
1559 | in void, scalar, or list context, depending on the context of the C<eval> |
1560 | itself. See L</wantarray> for more on how the evaluation context can be | |
1561 | determined. | |
a0d0e21e | 1562 | |
19799a22 | 1563 | If there is a syntax error or runtime error, or a C<die> statement is |
bbead3ca BL |
1564 | executed, C<eval> returns an undefined value in scalar context |
1565 | or an empty list in list context, and C<$@> is set to the | |
a0d0e21e | 1566 | error message. If there was no error, C<$@> is guaranteed to be a null |
19799a22 | 1567 | string. Beware that using C<eval> neither silences perl from printing |
c7cc6f1c | 1568 | warnings to STDERR, nor does it stuff the text of warning messages into C<$@>. |
d9984052 A |
1569 | To do either of those, you have to use the C<$SIG{__WARN__}> facility, or |
1570 | turn off warnings inside the BLOCK or EXPR using S<C<no warnings 'all'>>. | |
1571 | See L</warn>, L<perlvar>, L<warnings> and L<perllexwarn>. | |
a0d0e21e | 1572 | |
19799a22 GS |
1573 | Note that, because C<eval> traps otherwise-fatal errors, it is useful for |
1574 | determining whether a particular feature (such as C<socket> or C<symlink>) | |
a0d0e21e LW |
1575 | is implemented. It is also Perl's exception trapping mechanism, where |
1576 | the die operator is used to raise exceptions. | |
1577 | ||
5f1da31c NT |
1578 | If you want to trap errors when loading an XS module, some problems with |
1579 | the binary interface (such as Perl version skew) may be fatal even with | |
1580 | C<eval> unless C<$ENV{PERL_DL_NONLAZY}> is set. See L<perlrun>. | |
1581 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
1582 | If the code to be executed doesn't vary, you may use the eval-BLOCK |
1583 | form to trap run-time errors without incurring the penalty of | |
1584 | recompiling each time. The error, if any, is still returned in C<$@>. | |
1585 | Examples: | |
1586 | ||
54310121 | 1587 | # make divide-by-zero nonfatal |
a0d0e21e LW |
1588 | eval { $answer = $a / $b; }; warn $@ if $@; |
1589 | ||
1590 | # same thing, but less efficient | |
1591 | eval '$answer = $a / $b'; warn $@ if $@; | |
1592 | ||
1593 | # a compile-time error | |
5ed4f2ec | 1594 | eval { $answer = }; # WRONG |
a0d0e21e LW |
1595 | |
1596 | # a run-time error | |
5ed4f2ec | 1597 | eval '$answer ='; # sets $@ |
a0d0e21e | 1598 | |
cf264981 SP |
1599 | Using the C<eval{}> form as an exception trap in libraries does have some |
1600 | issues. Due to the current arguably broken state of C<__DIE__> hooks, you | |
1601 | may wish not to trigger any C<__DIE__> hooks that user code may have installed. | |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
1602 | You can use the C<local $SIG{__DIE__}> construct for this purpose, |
1603 | as shown in this example: | |
774d564b | 1604 | |
1605 | # a very private exception trap for divide-by-zero | |
f86cebdf GS |
1606 | eval { local $SIG{'__DIE__'}; $answer = $a / $b; }; |
1607 | warn $@ if $@; | |
774d564b | 1608 | |
1609 | This is especially significant, given that C<__DIE__> hooks can call | |
19799a22 | 1610 | C<die> again, which has the effect of changing their error messages: |
774d564b | 1611 | |
1612 | # __DIE__ hooks may modify error messages | |
1613 | { | |
f86cebdf GS |
1614 | local $SIG{'__DIE__'} = |
1615 | sub { (my $x = $_[0]) =~ s/foo/bar/g; die $x }; | |
c7cc6f1c GS |
1616 | eval { die "foo lives here" }; |
1617 | print $@ if $@; # prints "bar lives here" | |
774d564b | 1618 | } |
1619 | ||
19799a22 | 1620 | Because this promotes action at a distance, this counterintuitive behavior |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
1621 | may be fixed in a future release. |
1622 | ||
19799a22 | 1623 | With an C<eval>, you should be especially careful to remember what's |
a0d0e21e LW |
1624 | being looked at when: |
1625 | ||
5ed4f2ec | 1626 | eval $x; # CASE 1 |
1627 | eval "$x"; # CASE 2 | |
a0d0e21e | 1628 | |
5ed4f2ec | 1629 | eval '$x'; # CASE 3 |
1630 | eval { $x }; # CASE 4 | |
a0d0e21e | 1631 | |
5ed4f2ec | 1632 | eval "\$$x++"; # CASE 5 |
1633 | $$x++; # CASE 6 | |
a0d0e21e | 1634 | |
2f9daede | 1635 | Cases 1 and 2 above behave identically: they run the code contained in |
19799a22 | 1636 | the variable $x. (Although case 2 has misleading double quotes making |
2f9daede | 1637 | the reader wonder what else might be happening (nothing is).) Cases 3 |
7660c0ab | 1638 | and 4 likewise behave in the same way: they run the code C<'$x'>, which |
19799a22 | 1639 | does nothing but return the value of $x. (Case 4 is preferred for |
2f9daede TP |
1640 | purely visual reasons, but it also has the advantage of compiling at |
1641 | compile-time instead of at run-time.) Case 5 is a place where | |
19799a22 | 1642 | normally you I<would> like to use double quotes, except that in this |
2f9daede TP |
1643 | particular situation, you can just use symbolic references instead, as |
1644 | in case 6. | |
a0d0e21e | 1645 | |
8a5a710d DN |
1646 | The assignment to C<$@> occurs before restoration of localised variables, |
1647 | which means a temporary is required if you want to mask some but not all | |
1648 | errors: | |
1649 | ||
1650 | # alter $@ on nefarious repugnancy only | |
1651 | { | |
1652 | my $e; | |
1653 | { | |
1654 | local $@; # protect existing $@ | |
1655 | eval { test_repugnancy() }; | |
1656 | # $@ =~ /nefarious/ and die $@; # DOES NOT WORK | |
1657 | $@ =~ /nefarious/ and $e = $@; | |
1658 | } | |
1659 | die $e if defined $e | |
1660 | } | |
1661 | ||
4968c1e4 | 1662 | C<eval BLOCK> does I<not> count as a loop, so the loop control statements |
2b5ab1e7 | 1663 | C<next>, C<last>, or C<redo> cannot be used to leave or restart the block. |
4968c1e4 | 1664 | |
d819b83a DM |
1665 | Note that as a very special case, an C<eval ''> executed within the C<DB> |
1666 | package doesn't see the usual surrounding lexical scope, but rather the | |
1667 | scope of the first non-DB piece of code that called it. You don't normally | |
1668 | need to worry about this unless you are writing a Perl debugger. | |
1669 | ||
a0d0e21e | 1670 | =item exec LIST |
d74e8afc | 1671 | X<exec> X<execute> |
a0d0e21e | 1672 | |
8bf3b016 GS |
1673 | =item exec PROGRAM LIST |
1674 | ||
19799a22 GS |
1675 | The C<exec> function executes a system command I<and never returns>-- |
1676 | use C<system> instead of C<exec> if you want it to return. It fails and | |
1677 | returns false only if the command does not exist I<and> it is executed | |
fb73857a | 1678 | directly instead of via your system's command shell (see below). |
a0d0e21e | 1679 | |
19799a22 GS |
1680 | Since it's a common mistake to use C<exec> instead of C<system>, Perl |
1681 | warns you if there is a following statement which isn't C<die>, C<warn>, | |
1682 | or C<exit> (if C<-w> is set - but you always do that). If you | |
1683 | I<really> want to follow an C<exec> with some other statement, you | |
55d729e4 GS |
1684 | can use one of these styles to avoid the warning: |
1685 | ||
5a964f20 TC |
1686 | exec ('foo') or print STDERR "couldn't exec foo: $!"; |
1687 | { exec ('foo') }; print STDERR "couldn't exec foo: $!"; | |
55d729e4 | 1688 | |
5a964f20 | 1689 | If there is more than one argument in LIST, or if LIST is an array |
f86cebdf | 1690 | with more than one value, calls execvp(3) with the arguments in LIST. |
5a964f20 TC |
1691 | If there is only one scalar argument or an array with one element in it, |
1692 | the argument is checked for shell metacharacters, and if there are any, | |
1693 | the entire argument is passed to the system's command shell for parsing | |
1694 | (this is C</bin/sh -c> on Unix platforms, but varies on other platforms). | |
1695 | If there are no shell metacharacters in the argument, it is split into | |
b76cc8ba | 1696 | words and passed directly to C<execvp>, which is more efficient. |
19799a22 | 1697 | Examples: |
a0d0e21e | 1698 | |
19799a22 GS |
1699 | exec '/bin/echo', 'Your arguments are: ', @ARGV; |
1700 | exec "sort $outfile | uniq"; | |
a0d0e21e LW |
1701 | |
1702 | If you don't really want to execute the first argument, but want to lie | |
1703 | to the program you are executing about its own name, you can specify | |
1704 | the program you actually want to run as an "indirect object" (without a | |
1705 | comma) in front of the LIST. (This always forces interpretation of the | |
54310121 | 1706 | LIST as a multivalued list, even if there is only a single scalar in |
a0d0e21e LW |
1707 | the list.) Example: |
1708 | ||
1709 | $shell = '/bin/csh'; | |
5ed4f2ec | 1710 | exec $shell '-sh'; # pretend it's a login shell |
a0d0e21e LW |
1711 | |
1712 | or, more directly, | |
1713 | ||
5ed4f2ec | 1714 | exec {'/bin/csh'} '-sh'; # pretend it's a login shell |
a0d0e21e | 1715 | |
bb32b41a GS |
1716 | When the arguments get executed via the system shell, results will |
1717 | be subject to its quirks and capabilities. See L<perlop/"`STRING`"> | |
1718 | for details. | |
1719 | ||
19799a22 GS |
1720 | Using an indirect object with C<exec> or C<system> is also more |
1721 | secure. This usage (which also works fine with system()) forces | |
1722 | interpretation of the arguments as a multivalued list, even if the | |
1723 | list had just one argument. That way you're safe from the shell | |
1724 | expanding wildcards or splitting up words with whitespace in them. | |
5a964f20 TC |
1725 | |
1726 | @args = ( "echo surprise" ); | |
1727 | ||
2b5ab1e7 | 1728 | exec @args; # subject to shell escapes |
f86cebdf | 1729 | # if @args == 1 |
2b5ab1e7 | 1730 | exec { $args[0] } @args; # safe even with one-arg list |
5a964f20 TC |
1731 | |
1732 | The first version, the one without the indirect object, ran the I<echo> | |
1733 | program, passing it C<"surprise"> an argument. The second version | |
1734 | didn't--it tried to run a program literally called I<"echo surprise">, | |
1735 | didn't find it, and set C<$?> to a non-zero value indicating failure. | |
1736 | ||
0f897271 GS |
1737 | Beginning with v5.6.0, Perl will attempt to flush all files opened for |
1738 | output before the exec, but this may not be supported on some platforms | |
1739 | (see L<perlport>). To be safe, you may need to set C<$|> ($AUTOFLUSH | |
1740 | in English) or call the C<autoflush()> method of C<IO::Handle> on any | |
1741 | open handles in order to avoid lost output. | |
1742 | ||
19799a22 | 1743 | Note that C<exec> will not call your C<END> blocks, nor will it call |
7660c0ab A |
1744 | any C<DESTROY> methods in your objects. |
1745 | ||
a0d0e21e | 1746 | =item exists EXPR |
d74e8afc | 1747 | X<exists> X<autovivification> |
a0d0e21e | 1748 | |
01020589 | 1749 | Given an expression that specifies a hash element or array element, |
8ea97a1e | 1750 | returns true if the specified element in the hash or array has ever |
95731d22 | 1751 | been initialized, even if the corresponding value is undefined. |
a0d0e21e | 1752 | |
5ed4f2ec | 1753 | print "Exists\n" if exists $hash{$key}; |
1754 | print "Defined\n" if defined $hash{$key}; | |
01020589 GS |
1755 | print "True\n" if $hash{$key}; |
1756 | ||
5ed4f2ec | 1757 | print "Exists\n" if exists $array[$index]; |
1758 | print "Defined\n" if defined $array[$index]; | |
01020589 | 1759 | print "True\n" if $array[$index]; |
a0d0e21e | 1760 | |
8ea97a1e | 1761 | A hash or array element can be true only if it's defined, and defined if |
a0d0e21e LW |
1762 | it exists, but the reverse doesn't necessarily hold true. |
1763 | ||
afebc493 GS |
1764 | Given an expression that specifies the name of a subroutine, |
1765 | returns true if the specified subroutine has ever been declared, even | |
1766 | if it is undefined. Mentioning a subroutine name for exists or defined | |
847c7ebe DD |
1767 | does not count as declaring it. Note that a subroutine which does not |
1768 | exist may still be callable: its package may have an C<AUTOLOAD> | |
1769 | method that makes it spring into existence the first time that it is | |
1770 | called -- see L<perlsub>. | |
afebc493 | 1771 | |
5ed4f2ec | 1772 | print "Exists\n" if exists &subroutine; |
1773 | print "Defined\n" if defined &subroutine; | |
afebc493 | 1774 | |
a0d0e21e | 1775 | Note that the EXPR can be arbitrarily complicated as long as the final |
afebc493 | 1776 | operation is a hash or array key lookup or subroutine name: |
a0d0e21e | 1777 | |
5ed4f2ec | 1778 | if (exists $ref->{A}->{B}->{$key}) { } |
1779 | if (exists $hash{A}{B}{$key}) { } | |
2b5ab1e7 | 1780 | |
5ed4f2ec | 1781 | if (exists $ref->{A}->{B}->[$ix]) { } |
1782 | if (exists $hash{A}{B}[$ix]) { } | |
01020589 | 1783 | |
afebc493 GS |
1784 | if (exists &{$ref->{A}{B}{$key}}) { } |
1785 | ||
01020589 GS |
1786 | Although the deepest nested array or hash will not spring into existence |
1787 | just because its existence was tested, any intervening ones will. | |
61eff3bc | 1788 | Thus C<< $ref->{"A"} >> and C<< $ref->{"A"}->{"B"} >> will spring |
01020589 GS |
1789 | into existence due to the existence test for the $key element above. |
1790 | This happens anywhere the arrow operator is used, including even: | |
5a964f20 | 1791 | |
2b5ab1e7 | 1792 | undef $ref; |
5ed4f2ec | 1793 | if (exists $ref->{"Some key"}) { } |
1794 | print $ref; # prints HASH(0x80d3d5c) | |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
1795 | |
1796 | This surprising autovivification in what does not at first--or even | |
1797 | second--glance appear to be an lvalue context may be fixed in a future | |
5a964f20 | 1798 | release. |
a0d0e21e | 1799 | |
afebc493 GS |
1800 | Use of a subroutine call, rather than a subroutine name, as an argument |
1801 | to exists() is an error. | |
1802 | ||
5ed4f2ec | 1803 | exists ⊂ # OK |
1804 | exists &sub(); # Error | |
afebc493 | 1805 | |
a0d0e21e | 1806 | =item exit EXPR |
d74e8afc | 1807 | X<exit> X<terminate> X<abort> |
a0d0e21e | 1808 | |
ce2984c3 PF |
1809 | =item exit |
1810 | ||
2b5ab1e7 | 1811 | Evaluates EXPR and exits immediately with that value. Example: |
a0d0e21e LW |
1812 | |
1813 | $ans = <STDIN>; | |
1814 | exit 0 if $ans =~ /^[Xx]/; | |
1815 | ||
19799a22 | 1816 | See also C<die>. If EXPR is omitted, exits with C<0> status. The only |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
1817 | universally recognized values for EXPR are C<0> for success and C<1> |
1818 | for error; other values are subject to interpretation depending on the | |
1819 | environment in which the Perl program is running. For example, exiting | |
1820 | 69 (EX_UNAVAILABLE) from a I<sendmail> incoming-mail filter will cause | |
1821 | the mailer to return the item undelivered, but that's not true everywhere. | |
a0d0e21e | 1822 | |
19799a22 GS |
1823 | Don't use C<exit> to abort a subroutine if there's any chance that |
1824 | someone might want to trap whatever error happened. Use C<die> instead, | |
1825 | which can be trapped by an C<eval>. | |
28757baa | 1826 | |
19799a22 | 1827 | The exit() function does not always exit immediately. It calls any |
2b5ab1e7 | 1828 | defined C<END> routines first, but these C<END> routines may not |
19799a22 | 1829 | themselves abort the exit. Likewise any object destructors that need to |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
1830 | be called are called before the real exit. If this is a problem, you |
1831 | can call C<POSIX:_exit($status)> to avoid END and destructor processing. | |
87275199 | 1832 | See L<perlmod> for details. |
5a964f20 | 1833 | |
a0d0e21e | 1834 | =item exp EXPR |
d74e8afc | 1835 | X<exp> X<exponential> X<antilog> X<antilogarithm> X<e> |
a0d0e21e | 1836 | |
54310121 | 1837 | =item exp |
bbce6d69 | 1838 | |
b76cc8ba | 1839 | Returns I<e> (the natural logarithm base) to the power of EXPR. |
a0d0e21e LW |
1840 | If EXPR is omitted, gives C<exp($_)>. |
1841 | ||
1842 | =item fcntl FILEHANDLE,FUNCTION,SCALAR | |
d74e8afc | 1843 | X<fcntl> |
a0d0e21e | 1844 | |
f86cebdf | 1845 | Implements the fcntl(2) function. You'll probably have to say |
a0d0e21e LW |
1846 | |
1847 | use Fcntl; | |
1848 | ||
0ade1984 | 1849 | first to get the correct constant definitions. Argument processing and |
b76cc8ba | 1850 | value return works just like C<ioctl> below. |
a0d0e21e LW |
1851 | For example: |
1852 | ||
1853 | use Fcntl; | |
5a964f20 | 1854 | fcntl($filehandle, F_GETFL, $packed_return_buffer) |
a9a5a0dc | 1855 | or die "can't fcntl F_GETFL: $!"; |
5a964f20 | 1856 | |
554ad1fc | 1857 | You don't have to check for C<defined> on the return from C<fcntl>. |
951ba7fe GS |
1858 | Like C<ioctl>, it maps a C<0> return from the system call into |
1859 | C<"0 but true"> in Perl. This string is true in boolean context and C<0> | |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
1860 | in numeric context. It is also exempt from the normal B<-w> warnings |
1861 | on improper numeric conversions. | |
5a964f20 | 1862 | |
19799a22 | 1863 | Note that C<fcntl> will produce a fatal error if used on a machine that |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
1864 | doesn't implement fcntl(2). See the Fcntl module or your fcntl(2) |
1865 | manpage to learn what functions are available on your system. | |
a0d0e21e | 1866 | |
be2f7487 TH |
1867 | Here's an example of setting a filehandle named C<REMOTE> to be |
1868 | non-blocking at the system level. You'll have to negotiate C<$|> | |
1869 | on your own, though. | |
1870 | ||
1871 | use Fcntl qw(F_GETFL F_SETFL O_NONBLOCK); | |
1872 | ||
1873 | $flags = fcntl(REMOTE, F_GETFL, 0) | |
1874 | or die "Can't get flags for the socket: $!\n"; | |
1875 | ||
1876 | $flags = fcntl(REMOTE, F_SETFL, $flags | O_NONBLOCK) | |
1877 | or die "Can't set flags for the socket: $!\n"; | |
1878 | ||
a0d0e21e | 1879 | =item fileno FILEHANDLE |
d74e8afc | 1880 | X<fileno> |
a0d0e21e | 1881 | |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
1882 | Returns the file descriptor for a filehandle, or undefined if the |
1883 | filehandle is not open. This is mainly useful for constructing | |
19799a22 | 1884 | bitmaps for C<select> and low-level POSIX tty-handling operations. |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
1885 | If FILEHANDLE is an expression, the value is taken as an indirect |
1886 | filehandle, generally its name. | |
5a964f20 | 1887 | |
b76cc8ba | 1888 | You can use this to find out whether two handles refer to the |
5a964f20 TC |
1889 | same underlying descriptor: |
1890 | ||
1891 | if (fileno(THIS) == fileno(THAT)) { | |
a9a5a0dc | 1892 | print "THIS and THAT are dups\n"; |
b76cc8ba NIS |
1893 | } |
1894 | ||
1895 | (Filehandles connected to memory objects via new features of C<open> may | |
1896 | return undefined even though they are open.) | |
1897 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
1898 | |
1899 | =item flock FILEHANDLE,OPERATION | |
d74e8afc | 1900 | X<flock> X<lock> X<locking> |
a0d0e21e | 1901 | |
19799a22 GS |
1902 | Calls flock(2), or an emulation of it, on FILEHANDLE. Returns true |
1903 | for success, false on failure. Produces a fatal error if used on a | |
2b5ab1e7 | 1904 | machine that doesn't implement flock(2), fcntl(2) locking, or lockf(3). |
19799a22 | 1905 | C<flock> is Perl's portable file locking interface, although it locks |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
1906 | only entire files, not records. |
1907 | ||
1908 | Two potentially non-obvious but traditional C<flock> semantics are | |
1909 | that it waits indefinitely until the lock is granted, and that its locks | |
1910 | B<merely advisory>. Such discretionary locks are more flexible, but offer | |
cf264981 SP |
1911 | fewer guarantees. This means that programs that do not also use C<flock> |
1912 | may modify files locked with C<flock>. See L<perlport>, | |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
1913 | your port's specific documentation, or your system-specific local manpages |
1914 | for details. It's best to assume traditional behavior if you're writing | |
1915 | portable programs. (But if you're not, you should as always feel perfectly | |
1916 | free to write for your own system's idiosyncrasies (sometimes called | |
1917 | "features"). Slavish adherence to portability concerns shouldn't get | |
1918 | in the way of your getting your job done.) | |
a3cb178b | 1919 | |
8ebc5c01 | 1920 | OPERATION is one of LOCK_SH, LOCK_EX, or LOCK_UN, possibly combined with |
1921 | LOCK_NB. These constants are traditionally valued 1, 2, 8 and 4, but | |
ea3105be | 1922 | you can use the symbolic names if you import them from the Fcntl module, |
68dc0745 | 1923 | either individually, or as a group using the ':flock' tag. LOCK_SH |
1924 | requests a shared lock, LOCK_EX requests an exclusive lock, and LOCK_UN | |
ea3105be GS |
1925 | releases a previously requested lock. If LOCK_NB is bitwise-or'ed with |
1926 | LOCK_SH or LOCK_EX then C<flock> will return immediately rather than blocking | |
68dc0745 | 1927 | waiting for the lock (check the return status to see if you got it). |
1928 | ||
2b5ab1e7 TC |
1929 | To avoid the possibility of miscoordination, Perl now flushes FILEHANDLE |
1930 | before locking or unlocking it. | |
8ebc5c01 | 1931 | |
f86cebdf | 1932 | Note that the emulation built with lockf(3) doesn't provide shared |
8ebc5c01 | 1933 | locks, and it requires that FILEHANDLE be open with write intent. These |
2b5ab1e7 | 1934 | are the semantics that lockf(3) implements. Most if not all systems |
f86cebdf | 1935 | implement lockf(3) in terms of fcntl(2) locking, though, so the |
8ebc5c01 | 1936 | differing semantics shouldn't bite too many people. |
1937 | ||
becacb53 TM |
1938 | Note that the fcntl(2) emulation of flock(3) requires that FILEHANDLE |
1939 | be open with read intent to use LOCK_SH and requires that it be open | |
1940 | with write intent to use LOCK_EX. | |
1941 | ||
19799a22 GS |
1942 | Note also that some versions of C<flock> cannot lock things over the |
1943 | network; you would need to use the more system-specific C<fcntl> for | |
f86cebdf GS |
1944 | that. If you like you can force Perl to ignore your system's flock(2) |
1945 | function, and so provide its own fcntl(2)-based emulation, by passing | |
8ebc5c01 | 1946 | the switch C<-Ud_flock> to the F<Configure> program when you configure |
1947 | perl. | |
4633a7c4 LW |
1948 | |
1949 | Here's a mailbox appender for BSD systems. | |
a0d0e21e | 1950 | |
7ed5353d | 1951 | use Fcntl qw(:flock SEEK_END); # import LOCK_* and SEEK_END constants |
a0d0e21e LW |
1952 | |
1953 | sub lock { | |
a9a5a0dc VP |
1954 | my ($fh) = @_; |
1955 | flock($fh, LOCK_EX) or die "Cannot lock mailbox - $!\n"; | |
7ed5353d | 1956 | |
a9a5a0dc VP |
1957 | # and, in case someone appended while we were waiting... |
1958 | seek($fh, 0, SEEK_END) or die "Cannot seek - $!\n"; | |
a0d0e21e LW |
1959 | } |
1960 | ||
1961 | sub unlock { | |
a9a5a0dc VP |
1962 | my ($fh) = @_; |
1963 | flock($fh, LOCK_UN) or die "Cannot unlock mailbox - $!\n"; | |
a0d0e21e LW |
1964 | } |
1965 | ||
b0169937 | 1966 | open(my $mbox, ">>", "/usr/spool/mail/$ENV{'USER'}") |
5ed4f2ec | 1967 | or die "Can't open mailbox: $!"; |
a0d0e21e | 1968 | |
7ed5353d | 1969 | lock($mbox); |
b0169937 | 1970 | print $mbox $msg,"\n\n"; |
7ed5353d | 1971 | unlock($mbox); |
a0d0e21e | 1972 | |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
1973 | On systems that support a real flock(), locks are inherited across fork() |
1974 | calls, whereas those that must resort to the more capricious fcntl() | |
1975 | function lose the locks, making it harder to write servers. | |
1976 | ||
cb1a09d0 | 1977 | See also L<DB_File> for other flock() examples. |
a0d0e21e LW |
1978 | |
1979 | =item fork | |
d74e8afc | 1980 | X<fork> X<child> X<parent> |
a0d0e21e | 1981 | |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
1982 | Does a fork(2) system call to create a new process running the |
1983 | same program at the same point. It returns the child pid to the | |
1984 | parent process, C<0> to the child process, or C<undef> if the fork is | |
1985 | unsuccessful. File descriptors (and sometimes locks on those descriptors) | |
1986 | are shared, while everything else is copied. On most systems supporting | |
1987 | fork(), great care has gone into making it extremely efficient (for | |
1988 | example, using copy-on-write technology on data pages), making it the | |
1989 | dominant paradigm for multitasking over the last few decades. | |
5a964f20 | 1990 | |
0f897271 GS |
1991 | Beginning with v5.6.0, Perl will attempt to flush all files opened for |
1992 | output before forking the child process, but this may not be supported | |
1993 | on some platforms (see L<perlport>). To be safe, you may need to set | |
1994 | C<$|> ($AUTOFLUSH in English) or call the C<autoflush()> method of | |
1995 | C<IO::Handle> on any open handles in order to avoid duplicate output. | |
a0d0e21e | 1996 | |
19799a22 | 1997 | If you C<fork> without ever waiting on your children, you will |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
1998 | accumulate zombies. On some systems, you can avoid this by setting |
1999 | C<$SIG{CHLD}> to C<"IGNORE">. See also L<perlipc> for more examples of | |
2000 | forking and reaping moribund children. | |
cb1a09d0 | 2001 | |
28757baa | 2002 | Note that if your forked child inherits system file descriptors like |
2003 | STDIN and STDOUT that are actually connected by a pipe or socket, even | |
2b5ab1e7 | 2004 | if you exit, then the remote server (such as, say, a CGI script or a |
19799a22 | 2005 | backgrounded job launched from a remote shell) won't think you're done. |
2b5ab1e7 | 2006 | You should reopen those to F</dev/null> if it's any issue. |
28757baa | 2007 | |
cb1a09d0 | 2008 | =item format |
d74e8afc | 2009 | X<format> |
cb1a09d0 | 2010 | |
19799a22 | 2011 | Declare a picture format for use by the C<write> function. For |
cb1a09d0 AD |
2012 | example: |
2013 | ||
54310121 | 2014 | format Something = |
a9a5a0dc VP |
2015 | Test: @<<<<<<<< @||||| @>>>>> |
2016 | $str, $%, '$' . int($num) | |
cb1a09d0 AD |
2017 | . |
2018 | ||
2019 | $str = "widget"; | |
184e9718 | 2020 | $num = $cost/$quantity; |
cb1a09d0 AD |
2021 | $~ = 'Something'; |
2022 | write; | |
2023 | ||
2024 | See L<perlform> for many details and examples. | |
2025 | ||
8903cb82 | 2026 | =item formline PICTURE,LIST |
d74e8afc | 2027 | X<formline> |
a0d0e21e | 2028 | |
5a964f20 | 2029 | This is an internal function used by C<format>s, though you may call it, |
a0d0e21e LW |
2030 | too. It formats (see L<perlform>) a list of values according to the |
2031 | contents of PICTURE, placing the output into the format output | |
7660c0ab | 2032 | accumulator, C<$^A> (or C<$ACCUMULATOR> in English). |
19799a22 | 2033 | Eventually, when a C<write> is done, the contents of |
cf264981 SP |
2034 | C<$^A> are written to some filehandle. You could also read C<$^A> |
2035 | and then set C<$^A> back to C<"">. Note that a format typically | |
19799a22 | 2036 | does one C<formline> per line of form, but the C<formline> function itself |
748a9306 | 2037 | doesn't care how many newlines are embedded in the PICTURE. This means |
4633a7c4 | 2038 | that the C<~> and C<~~> tokens will treat the entire PICTURE as a single line. |
748a9306 LW |
2039 | You may therefore need to use multiple formlines to implement a single |
2040 | record format, just like the format compiler. | |
2041 | ||
19799a22 | 2042 | Be careful if you put double quotes around the picture, because an C<@> |
748a9306 | 2043 | character may be taken to mean the beginning of an array name. |
19799a22 | 2044 | C<formline> always returns true. See L<perlform> for other examples. |
a0d0e21e LW |
2045 | |
2046 | =item getc FILEHANDLE | |
f723aae1 | 2047 | X<getc> X<getchar> X<character> X<file, read> |
a0d0e21e LW |
2048 | |
2049 | =item getc | |
2050 | ||
2051 | Returns the next character from the input file attached to FILEHANDLE, | |
b5fe5ca2 SR |
2052 | or the undefined value at end of file, or if there was an error (in |
2053 | the latter case C<$!> is set). If FILEHANDLE is omitted, reads from | |
2054 | STDIN. This is not particularly efficient. However, it cannot be | |
2055 | used by itself to fetch single characters without waiting for the user | |
2056 | to hit enter. For that, try something more like: | |
4633a7c4 LW |
2057 | |
2058 | if ($BSD_STYLE) { | |
a9a5a0dc | 2059 | system "stty cbreak </dev/tty >/dev/tty 2>&1"; |
4633a7c4 LW |
2060 | } |
2061 | else { | |
a9a5a0dc | 2062 | system "stty", '-icanon', 'eol', "\001"; |
4633a7c4 LW |
2063 | } |
2064 | ||
2065 | $key = getc(STDIN); | |
2066 | ||
2067 | if ($BSD_STYLE) { | |
a9a5a0dc | 2068 | system "stty -cbreak </dev/tty >/dev/tty 2>&1"; |
4633a7c4 LW |
2069 | } |
2070 | else { | |
a9a5a0dc | 2071 | system "stty", 'icanon', 'eol', '^@'; # ASCII null |
4633a7c4 LW |
2072 | } |
2073 | print "\n"; | |
2074 | ||
54310121 | 2075 | Determination of whether $BSD_STYLE should be set |
2076 | is left as an exercise to the reader. | |
cb1a09d0 | 2077 | |
19799a22 | 2078 | The C<POSIX::getattr> function can do this more portably on |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
2079 | systems purporting POSIX compliance. See also the C<Term::ReadKey> |
2080 | module from your nearest CPAN site; details on CPAN can be found on | |
2081 | L<perlmodlib/CPAN>. | |
a0d0e21e LW |
2082 | |
2083 | =item getlogin | |
d74e8afc | 2084 | X<getlogin> X<login> |
a0d0e21e | 2085 | |
cf264981 | 2086 | This implements the C library function of the same name, which on most |
5a964f20 | 2087 | systems returns the current login from F</etc/utmp>, if any. If null, |
19799a22 | 2088 | use C<getpwuid>. |
a0d0e21e | 2089 | |
f86702cc | 2090 | $login = getlogin || getpwuid($<) || "Kilroy"; |
a0d0e21e | 2091 | |
19799a22 GS |
2092 | Do not consider C<getlogin> for authentication: it is not as |
2093 | secure as C<getpwuid>. | |
4633a7c4 | 2094 | |
a0d0e21e | 2095 | =item getpeername SOCKET |
d74e8afc | 2096 | X<getpeername> X<peer> |
a0d0e21e LW |
2097 | |
2098 | Returns the packed sockaddr address of other end of the SOCKET connection. | |
2099 | ||
4633a7c4 LW |
2100 | use Socket; |
2101 | $hersockaddr = getpeername(SOCK); | |
19799a22 | 2102 | ($port, $iaddr) = sockaddr_in($hersockaddr); |
4633a7c4 LW |
2103 | $herhostname = gethostbyaddr($iaddr, AF_INET); |
2104 | $herstraddr = inet_ntoa($iaddr); | |
a0d0e21e LW |
2105 | |
2106 | =item getpgrp PID | |
d74e8afc | 2107 | X<getpgrp> X<group> |
a0d0e21e | 2108 | |
47e29363 | 2109 | Returns the current process group for the specified PID. Use |
7660c0ab | 2110 | a PID of C<0> to get the current process group for the |
4633a7c4 | 2111 | current process. Will raise an exception if used on a machine that |
f86cebdf | 2112 | doesn't implement getpgrp(2). If PID is omitted, returns process |
19799a22 | 2113 | group of current process. Note that the POSIX version of C<getpgrp> |
7660c0ab | 2114 | does not accept a PID argument, so only C<PID==0> is truly portable. |
a0d0e21e LW |
2115 | |
2116 | =item getppid | |
d74e8afc | 2117 | X<getppid> X<parent> X<pid> |
a0d0e21e LW |
2118 | |
2119 | Returns the process id of the parent process. | |
2120 | ||
4d76a344 RGS |
2121 | Note for Linux users: on Linux, the C functions C<getpid()> and |
2122 | C<getppid()> return different values from different threads. In order to | |
2123 | be portable, this behavior is not reflected by the perl-level function | |
2124 | C<getppid()>, that returns a consistent value across threads. If you want | |
e3256f86 RGS |
2125 | to call the underlying C<getppid()>, you may use the CPAN module |
2126 | C<Linux::Pid>. | |
4d76a344 | 2127 | |
a0d0e21e | 2128 | =item getpriority WHICH,WHO |
d74e8afc | 2129 | X<getpriority> X<priority> X<nice> |
a0d0e21e | 2130 | |
4633a7c4 | 2131 | Returns the current priority for a process, a process group, or a user. |
f4084e39 | 2132 | (See C<getpriority(2)>.) Will raise a fatal exception if used on a |
f86cebdf | 2133 | machine that doesn't implement getpriority(2). |
a0d0e21e LW |
2134 | |
2135 | =item getpwnam NAME | |
d74e8afc ITB |
2136 | X<getpwnam> X<getgrnam> X<gethostbyname> X<getnetbyname> X<getprotobyname> |
2137 | X<getpwuid> X<getgrgid> X<getservbyname> X<gethostbyaddr> X<getnetbyaddr> | |
2138 | X<getprotobynumber> X<getservbyport> X<getpwent> X<getgrent> X<gethostent> | |
2139 | X<getnetent> X<getprotoent> X<getservent> X<setpwent> X<setgrent> X<sethostent> | |
2140 | X<setnetent> X<setprotoent> X<setservent> X<endpwent> X<endgrent> X<endhostent> | |
2141 | X<endnetent> X<endprotoent> X<endservent> | |
a0d0e21e LW |
2142 | |
2143 | =item getgrnam NAME | |
2144 | ||
2145 | =item gethostbyname NAME | |
2146 | ||
2147 | =item getnetbyname NAME | |
2148 | ||
2149 | =item getprotobyname NAME | |
2150 | ||
2151 | =item getpwuid UID | |
2152 | ||
2153 | =item getgrgid GID | |
2154 | ||
2155 | =item getservbyname NAME,PROTO | |
2156 | ||
2157 | =item gethostbyaddr ADDR,ADDRTYPE | |
2158 | ||
2159 | =item getnetbyaddr ADDR,ADDRTYPE | |
2160 | ||
2161 | =item getprotobynumber NUMBER | |
2162 | ||
2163 | =item getservbyport PORT,PROTO | |
2164 | ||
2165 | =item getpwent | |
2166 | ||
2167 | =item getgrent | |
2168 | ||
2169 | =item gethostent | |
2170 | ||
2171 | =item getnetent | |
2172 | ||
2173 | =item getprotoent | |
2174 | ||
2175 | =item getservent | |
2176 | ||
2177 | =item setpwent | |
2178 | ||
2179 | =item setgrent | |
2180 | ||
2181 | =item sethostent STAYOPEN | |
2182 | ||
2183 | =item setnetent STAYOPEN | |
2184 | ||
2185 | =item setprotoent STAYOPEN | |
2186 | ||
2187 | =item setservent STAYOPEN | |
2188 | ||
2189 | =item endpwent | |
2190 | ||
2191 | =item endgrent | |
2192 | ||
2193 | =item endhostent | |
2194 | ||
2195 | =item endnetent | |
2196 | ||
2197 | =item endprotoent | |
2198 | ||
2199 | =item endservent | |
2200 | ||
2201 | These routines perform the same functions as their counterparts in the | |
5a964f20 | 2202 | system library. In list context, the return values from the |
a0d0e21e LW |
2203 | various get routines are as follows: |
2204 | ||
2205 | ($name,$passwd,$uid,$gid, | |
6ee623d5 | 2206 | $quota,$comment,$gcos,$dir,$shell,$expire) = getpw* |
a0d0e21e LW |
2207 | ($name,$passwd,$gid,$members) = getgr* |
2208 | ($name,$aliases,$addrtype,$length,@addrs) = gethost* | |
2209 | ($name,$aliases,$addrtype,$net) = getnet* | |
2210 | ($name,$aliases,$proto) = getproto* | |
2211 | ($name,$aliases,$port,$proto) = getserv* | |
2212 | ||
2213 | (If the entry doesn't exist you get a null list.) | |
2214 | ||
4602f195 JH |
2215 | The exact meaning of the $gcos field varies but it usually contains |
2216 | the real name of the user (as opposed to the login name) and other | |
2217 | information pertaining to the user. Beware, however, that in many | |
2218 | system users are able to change this information and therefore it | |
106325ad | 2219 | cannot be trusted and therefore the $gcos is tainted (see |
2959b6e3 JH |
2220 | L<perlsec>). The $passwd and $shell, user's encrypted password and |
2221 | login shell, are also tainted, because of the same reason. | |
4602f195 | 2222 | |
5a964f20 | 2223 | In scalar context, you get the name, unless the function was a |
a0d0e21e LW |
2224 | lookup by name, in which case you get the other thing, whatever it is. |
2225 | (If the entry doesn't exist you get the undefined value.) For example: | |
2226 | ||
5a964f20 TC |
2227 | $uid = getpwnam($name); |
2228 | $name = getpwuid($num); | |
2229 | $name = getpwent(); | |
2230 | $gid = getgrnam($name); | |
08a33e13 | 2231 | $name = getgrgid($num); |
5a964f20 TC |
2232 | $name = getgrent(); |
2233 | #etc. | |
a0d0e21e | 2234 | |
4602f195 JH |
2235 | In I<getpw*()> the fields $quota, $comment, and $expire are special |
2236 | cases in the sense that in many systems they are unsupported. If the | |
2237 | $quota is unsupported, it is an empty scalar. If it is supported, it | |
2238 | usually encodes the disk quota. If the $comment field is unsupported, | |
2239 | it is an empty scalar. If it is supported it usually encodes some | |
2240 | administrative comment about the user. In some systems the $quota | |
2241 | field may be $change or $age, fields that have to do with password | |
2242 | aging. In some systems the $comment field may be $class. The $expire | |
2243 | field, if present, encodes the expiration period of the account or the | |
2244 | password. For the availability and the exact meaning of these fields | |
2245 | in your system, please consult your getpwnam(3) documentation and your | |
2246 | F<pwd.h> file. You can also find out from within Perl what your | |
2247 | $quota and $comment fields mean and whether you have the $expire field | |
2248 | by using the C<Config> module and the values C<d_pwquota>, C<d_pwage>, | |
2249 | C<d_pwchange>, C<d_pwcomment>, and C<d_pwexpire>. Shadow password | |
2250 | files are only supported if your vendor has implemented them in the | |
2251 | intuitive fashion that calling the regular C library routines gets the | |
5d3a0a3b | 2252 | shadow versions if you're running under privilege or if there exists |
cf264981 SP |
2253 | the shadow(3) functions as found in System V (this includes Solaris |
2254 | and Linux.) Those systems that implement a proprietary shadow password | |
5d3a0a3b | 2255 | facility are unlikely to be supported. |
6ee623d5 | 2256 | |
19799a22 | 2257 | The $members value returned by I<getgr*()> is a space separated list of |
a0d0e21e LW |
2258 | the login names of the members of the group. |
2259 | ||
2260 | For the I<gethost*()> functions, if the C<h_errno> variable is supported in | |
2261 | C, it will be returned to you via C<$?> if the function call fails. The | |
7660c0ab | 2262 | C<@addrs> value returned by a successful call is a list of the raw |
a0d0e21e LW |
2263 | addresses returned by the corresponding system library call. In the |
2264 | Internet domain, each address is four bytes long and you can unpack it | |
2265 | by saying something like: | |
2266 | ||
f337b084 | 2267 | ($a,$b,$c,$d) = unpack('W4',$addr[0]); |
a0d0e21e | 2268 | |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
2269 | The Socket library makes this slightly easier: |
2270 | ||
2271 | use Socket; | |
2272 | $iaddr = inet_aton("127.1"); # or whatever address | |
2273 | $name = gethostbyaddr($iaddr, AF_INET); | |
2274 | ||
2275 | # or going the other way | |
19799a22 | 2276 | $straddr = inet_ntoa($iaddr); |
2b5ab1e7 | 2277 | |
d760c846 GS |
2278 | In the opposite way, to resolve a hostname to the IP address |
2279 | you can write this: | |
2280 | ||
2281 | use Socket; | |
2282 | $packed_ip = gethostbyname("www.perl.org"); | |
2283 | if (defined $packed_ip) { | |
2284 | $ip_address = inet_ntoa($packed_ip); | |
2285 | } | |
2286 | ||
2287 | Make sure <gethostbyname()> is called in SCALAR context and that | |
2288 | its return value is checked for definedness. | |
2289 | ||
19799a22 GS |
2290 | If you get tired of remembering which element of the return list |
2291 | contains which return value, by-name interfaces are provided | |
2292 | in standard modules: C<File::stat>, C<Net::hostent>, C<Net::netent>, | |
2293 | C<Net::protoent>, C<Net::servent>, C<Time::gmtime>, C<Time::localtime>, | |
2294 | and C<User::grent>. These override the normal built-ins, supplying | |
2295 | versions that return objects with the appropriate names | |
2296 | for each field. For example: | |
5a964f20 TC |
2297 | |
2298 | use File::stat; | |
2299 | use User::pwent; | |
2300 | $is_his = (stat($filename)->uid == pwent($whoever)->uid); | |
2301 | ||
b76cc8ba NIS |
2302 | Even though it looks like they're the same method calls (uid), |
2303 | they aren't, because a C<File::stat> object is different from | |
19799a22 | 2304 | a C<User::pwent> object. |
5a964f20 | 2305 | |
a0d0e21e | 2306 | =item getsockname SOCKET |
d74e8afc | 2307 | X<getsockname> |
a0d0e21e | 2308 | |
19799a22 GS |
2309 | Returns the packed sockaddr address of this end of the SOCKET connection, |
2310 | in case you don't know the address because you have several different | |
2311 | IPs that the connection might have come in on. | |
a0d0e21e | 2312 | |
4633a7c4 LW |
2313 | use Socket; |
2314 | $mysockaddr = getsockname(SOCK); | |
19799a22 | 2315 | ($port, $myaddr) = sockaddr_in($mysockaddr); |
b76cc8ba | 2316 | printf "Connect to %s [%s]\n", |
19799a22 GS |
2317 | scalar gethostbyaddr($myaddr, AF_INET), |
2318 | inet_ntoa($myaddr); | |
a0d0e21e LW |
2319 | |
2320 | =item getsockopt SOCKET,LEVEL,OPTNAME | |
d74e8afc | 2321 | X<getsockopt> |
a0d0e21e | 2322 | |
636e6b1f TH |
2323 | Queries the option named OPTNAME associated with SOCKET at a given LEVEL. |
2324 | Options may exist at multiple protocol levels depending on the socket | |
2325 | type, but at least the uppermost socket level SOL_SOCKET (defined in the | |
2326 | C<Socket> module) will exist. To query options at another level the | |
2327 | protocol number of the appropriate protocol controlling the option | |
2328 | should be supplied. For example, to indicate that an option is to be | |
2329 | interpreted by the TCP protocol, LEVEL should be set to the protocol | |
2330 | number of TCP, which you can get using getprotobyname. | |
2331 | ||
2332 | The call returns a packed string representing the requested socket option, | |
2333 | or C<undef> if there is an error (the error reason will be in $!). What | |
2334 | exactly is in the packed string depends in the LEVEL and OPTNAME, consult | |
2335 | your system documentation for details. A very common case however is that | |
cf264981 | 2336 | the option is an integer, in which case the result will be a packed |
636e6b1f TH |
2337 | integer which you can decode using unpack with the C<i> (or C<I>) format. |
2338 | ||
2339 | An example testing if Nagle's algorithm is turned on on a socket: | |
2340 | ||
4852725b | 2341 | use Socket qw(:all); |
636e6b1f TH |
2342 | |
2343 | defined(my $tcp = getprotobyname("tcp")) | |
a9a5a0dc | 2344 | or die "Could not determine the protocol number for tcp"; |
4852725b DD |
2345 | # my $tcp = IPPROTO_TCP; # Alternative |
2346 | my $packed = getsockopt($socket, $tcp, TCP_NODELAY) | |
a9a5a0dc | 2347 | or die "Could not query TCP_NODELAY socket option: $!"; |
636e6b1f TH |
2348 | my $nodelay = unpack("I", $packed); |
2349 | print "Nagle's algorithm is turned ", $nodelay ? "off\n" : "on\n"; | |
2350 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
2351 | |
2352 | =item glob EXPR | |
d74e8afc | 2353 | X<glob> X<wildcard> X<filename, expansion> X<expand> |
a0d0e21e | 2354 | |
0a753a76 | 2355 | =item glob |
2356 | ||
d9a9d457 JL |
2357 | In list context, returns a (possibly empty) list of filename expansions on |
2358 | the value of EXPR such as the standard Unix shell F</bin/csh> would do. In | |
2359 | scalar context, glob iterates through such filename expansions, returning | |
2360 | undef when the list is exhausted. This is the internal function | |
2361 | implementing the C<< <*.c> >> operator, but you can use it directly. If | |
2362 | EXPR is omitted, C<$_> is used. The C<< <*.c> >> operator is discussed in | |
2363 | more detail in L<perlop/"I/O Operators">. | |
a0d0e21e | 2364 | |
5c0c9249 PF |
2365 | Note that C<glob> will split its arguments on whitespace, treating |
2366 | each segment as separate pattern. As such, C<glob('*.c *.h')> would | |
2367 | match all files with a F<.c> or F<.h> extension. The expression | |
2368 | C<glob('.* *')> would match all files in the current working directory. | |
2369 | ||
3a4b19e4 | 2370 | Beginning with v5.6.0, this operator is implemented using the standard |
5c0c9249 PF |
2371 | C<File::Glob> extension. See L<File::Glob> for details, including |
2372 | C<bsd_glob> which does not treat whitespace as a pattern separator. | |
3a4b19e4 | 2373 | |
a0d0e21e | 2374 | =item gmtime EXPR |
d74e8afc | 2375 | X<gmtime> X<UTC> X<Greenwich> |
a0d0e21e | 2376 | |
ce2984c3 PF |
2377 | =item gmtime |
2378 | ||
435fbc73 GS |
2379 | Works just like L<localtime> but the returned values are |
2380 | localized for the standard Greenwich time zone. | |
a0d0e21e | 2381 | |
435fbc73 GS |
2382 | Note: when called in list context, $isdst, the last value |
2383 | returned by gmtime is always C<0>. There is no | |
2384 | Daylight Saving Time in GMT. | |
0a753a76 | 2385 | |
62aa5637 MS |
2386 | See L<perlport/gmtime> for portability concerns. |
2387 | ||
a0d0e21e | 2388 | =item goto LABEL |
d74e8afc | 2389 | X<goto> X<jump> X<jmp> |
a0d0e21e | 2390 | |
748a9306 LW |
2391 | =item goto EXPR |
2392 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
2393 | =item goto &NAME |
2394 | ||
b500e03b GG |
2395 | The C<goto-LABEL> form finds the statement labeled with LABEL and |
2396 | resumes execution there. It can't be used to get out of a block or | |
2397 | subroutine given to C<sort>. It can be used to go almost anywhere | |
2398 | else within the dynamic scope, including out of subroutines, but it's | |
2399 | usually better to use some other construct such as C<last> or C<die>. | |
2400 | The author of Perl has never felt the need to use this form of C<goto> | |
2401 | (in Perl, that is--C is another matter). (The difference being that C | |
2402 | does not offer named loops combined with loop control. Perl does, and | |
2403 | this replaces most structured uses of C<goto> in other languages.) | |
a0d0e21e | 2404 | |
7660c0ab A |
2405 | The C<goto-EXPR> form expects a label name, whose scope will be resolved |
2406 | dynamically. This allows for computed C<goto>s per FORTRAN, but isn't | |
748a9306 LW |
2407 | necessarily recommended if you're optimizing for maintainability: |
2408 | ||
2409 | goto ("FOO", "BAR", "GLARCH")[$i]; | |
2410 | ||
b500e03b | 2411 | Use of C<goto-LABEL> or C<goto-EXPR> to jump into a construct is |
0b98bec9 | 2412 | deprecated and will issue a warning. Even then, it may not be used to |
b500e03b GG |
2413 | go into any construct that requires initialization, such as a |
2414 | subroutine or a C<foreach> loop. It also can't be used to go into a | |
0b98bec9 | 2415 | construct that is optimized away. |
b500e03b | 2416 | |
1b6921cb BT |
2417 | The C<goto-&NAME> form is quite different from the other forms of |
2418 | C<goto>. In fact, it isn't a goto in the normal sense at all, and | |
2419 | doesn't have the stigma associated with other gotos. Instead, it | |
2420 | exits the current subroutine (losing any changes set by local()) and | |
2421 | immediately calls in its place the named subroutine using the current | |
2422 | value of @_. This is used by C<AUTOLOAD> subroutines that wish to | |
2423 | load another subroutine and then pretend that the other subroutine had | |
2424 | been called in the first place (except that any modifications to C<@_> | |
6cb9131c GS |
2425 | in the current subroutine are propagated to the other subroutine.) |
2426 | After the C<goto>, not even C<caller> will be able to tell that this | |
2427 | routine was called first. | |
2428 | ||
2429 | NAME needn't be the name of a subroutine; it can be a scalar variable | |
cf264981 | 2430 | containing a code reference, or a block that evaluates to a code |
6cb9131c | 2431 | reference. |
a0d0e21e LW |
2432 | |
2433 | =item grep BLOCK LIST | |
d74e8afc | 2434 | X<grep> |
a0d0e21e LW |
2435 | |
2436 | =item grep EXPR,LIST | |
2437 | ||
2b5ab1e7 TC |
2438 | This is similar in spirit to, but not the same as, grep(1) and its |
2439 | relatives. In particular, it is not limited to using regular expressions. | |
2f9daede | 2440 | |
a0d0e21e | 2441 | Evaluates the BLOCK or EXPR for each element of LIST (locally setting |
7660c0ab | 2442 | C<$_> to each element) and returns the list value consisting of those |
19799a22 GS |
2443 | elements for which the expression evaluated to true. In scalar |
2444 | context, returns the number of times the expression was true. | |
a0d0e21e LW |
2445 | |
2446 | @foo = grep(!/^#/, @bar); # weed out comments | |
2447 | ||
2448 | or equivalently, | |
2449 | ||
2450 | @foo = grep {!/^#/} @bar; # weed out comments | |
2451 | ||
be3174d2 GS |
2452 | Note that C<$_> is an alias to the list value, so it can be used to |
2453 | modify the elements of the LIST. While this is useful and supported, | |
2454 | it can cause bizarre results if the elements of LIST are not variables. | |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
2455 | Similarly, grep returns aliases into the original list, much as a for |
2456 | loop's index variable aliases the list elements. That is, modifying an | |
19799a22 GS |
2457 | element of a list returned by grep (for example, in a C<foreach>, C<map> |
2458 | or another C<grep>) actually modifies the element in the original list. | |
2b5ab1e7 | 2459 | This is usually something to be avoided when writing clear code. |
a0d0e21e | 2460 | |
a4fb8298 | 2461 | If C<$_> is lexical in the scope where the C<grep> appears (because it has |
cf264981 | 2462 | been declared with C<my $_>) then, in addition to being locally aliased to |
a4fb8298 RGS |
2463 | the list elements, C<$_> keeps being lexical inside the block; i.e. it |
2464 | can't be seen from the outside, avoiding any potential side-effects. | |
2465 | ||
19799a22 | 2466 | See also L</map> for a list composed of the results of the BLOCK or EXPR. |
38325410 | 2467 | |
a0d0e21e | 2468 | =item hex EXPR |
d74e8afc | 2469 | X<hex> X<hexadecimal> |
a0d0e21e | 2470 | |
54310121 | 2471 | =item hex |
bbce6d69 | 2472 | |
2b5ab1e7 | 2473 | Interprets EXPR as a hex string and returns the corresponding value. |
38366c11 | 2474 | (To convert strings that might start with either C<0>, C<0x>, or C<0b>, see |
2b5ab1e7 | 2475 | L</oct>.) If EXPR is omitted, uses C<$_>. |
2f9daede TP |
2476 | |
2477 | print hex '0xAf'; # prints '175' | |
2478 | print hex 'aF'; # same | |
a0d0e21e | 2479 | |
19799a22 | 2480 | Hex strings may only represent integers. Strings that would cause |
53305cf1 | 2481 | integer overflow trigger a warning. Leading whitespace is not stripped, |
38366c11 DN |
2482 | unlike oct(). To present something as hex, look into L</printf>, |
2483 | L</sprintf>, or L</unpack>. | |
19799a22 | 2484 | |
ce2984c3 | 2485 | =item import LIST |
d74e8afc | 2486 | X<import> |
a0d0e21e | 2487 | |
19799a22 | 2488 | There is no builtin C<import> function. It is just an ordinary |
4633a7c4 | 2489 | method (subroutine) defined (or inherited) by modules that wish to export |
19799a22 | 2490 | names to another module. The C<use> function calls the C<import> method |
cea6626f | 2491 | for the package used. See also L</use>, L<perlmod>, and L<Exporter>. |
a0d0e21e LW |
2492 | |
2493 | =item index STR,SUBSTR,POSITION | |
d74e8afc | 2494 | X<index> X<indexOf> X<InStr> |
a0d0e21e LW |
2495 | |
2496 | =item index STR,SUBSTR | |
2497 | ||
2b5ab1e7 TC |
2498 | The index function searches for one string within another, but without |
2499 | the wildcard-like behavior of a full regular-expression pattern match. | |
2500 | It returns the position of the first occurrence of SUBSTR in STR at | |
2501 | or after POSITION. If POSITION is omitted, starts searching from the | |
26f149de YST |
2502 | beginning of the string. POSITION before the beginning of the string |
2503 | or after its end is treated as if it were the beginning or the end, | |
2504 | respectively. POSITION and the return value are based at C<0> (or whatever | |
2b5ab1e7 | 2505 | you've set the C<$[> variable to--but don't do that). If the substring |
cf264981 | 2506 | is not found, C<index> returns one less than the base, ordinarily C<-1>. |
a0d0e21e LW |
2507 | |
2508 | =item int EXPR | |
f723aae1 | 2509 | X<int> X<integer> X<truncate> X<trunc> X<floor> |
a0d0e21e | 2510 | |
54310121 | 2511 | =item int |
bbce6d69 | 2512 | |
7660c0ab | 2513 | Returns the integer portion of EXPR. If EXPR is omitted, uses C<$_>. |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
2514 | You should not use this function for rounding: one because it truncates |
2515 | towards C<0>, and two because machine representations of floating point | |
2516 | numbers can sometimes produce counterintuitive results. For example, | |
2517 | C<int(-6.725/0.025)> produces -268 rather than the correct -269; that's | |
2518 | because it's really more like -268.99999999999994315658 instead. Usually, | |
19799a22 | 2519 | the C<sprintf>, C<printf>, or the C<POSIX::floor> and C<POSIX::ceil> |
2b5ab1e7 | 2520 | functions will serve you better than will int(). |
a0d0e21e LW |
2521 | |
2522 | =item ioctl FILEHANDLE,FUNCTION,SCALAR | |
d74e8afc | 2523 | X<ioctl> |
a0d0e21e | 2524 | |
2b5ab1e7 | 2525 | Implements the ioctl(2) function. You'll probably first have to say |
a0d0e21e | 2526 | |
5ed4f2ec | 2527 | require "sys/ioctl.ph"; # probably in $Config{archlib}/sys/ioctl.ph |
a0d0e21e | 2528 | |
a11c483f | 2529 | to get the correct function definitions. If F<sys/ioctl.ph> doesn't |
a0d0e21e | 2530 | exist or doesn't have the correct definitions you'll have to roll your |
61eff3bc | 2531 | own, based on your C header files such as F<< <sys/ioctl.h> >>. |
5a964f20 | 2532 | (There is a Perl script called B<h2ph> that comes with the Perl kit that |
54310121 | 2533 | may help you in this, but it's nontrivial.) SCALAR will be read and/or |
4633a7c4 | 2534 | written depending on the FUNCTION--a pointer to the string value of SCALAR |
19799a22 | 2535 | will be passed as the third argument of the actual C<ioctl> call. (If SCALAR |
4633a7c4 LW |
2536 | has no string value but does have a numeric value, that value will be |
2537 | passed rather than a pointer to the string value. To guarantee this to be | |
19799a22 GS |
2538 | true, add a C<0> to the scalar before using it.) The C<pack> and C<unpack> |
2539 | functions may be needed to manipulate the values of structures used by | |
b76cc8ba | 2540 | C<ioctl>. |
a0d0e21e | 2541 | |
19799a22 | 2542 | The return value of C<ioctl> (and C<fcntl>) is as follows: |
a0d0e21e | 2543 | |
5ed4f2ec | 2544 | if OS returns: then Perl returns: |
2545 | -1 undefined value | |
2546 | 0 string "0 but true" | |
2547 | anything else that number | |
a0d0e21e | 2548 | |
19799a22 | 2549 | Thus Perl returns true on success and false on failure, yet you can |
a0d0e21e LW |
2550 | still easily determine the actual value returned by the operating |
2551 | system: | |
2552 | ||
2b5ab1e7 | 2553 | $retval = ioctl(...) || -1; |
a0d0e21e LW |
2554 | printf "System returned %d\n", $retval; |
2555 | ||
be2f7487 | 2556 | The special string C<"0 but true"> is exempt from B<-w> complaints |
5a964f20 TC |
2557 | about improper numeric conversions. |
2558 | ||
a0d0e21e | 2559 | =item join EXPR,LIST |
d74e8afc | 2560 | X<join> |
a0d0e21e | 2561 | |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
2562 | Joins the separate strings of LIST into a single string with fields |
2563 | separated by the value of EXPR, and returns that new string. Example: | |
a0d0e21e | 2564 | |
2b5ab1e7 | 2565 | $rec = join(':', $login,$passwd,$uid,$gid,$gcos,$home,$shell); |
a0d0e21e | 2566 | |
eb6e2d6f GS |
2567 | Beware that unlike C<split>, C<join> doesn't take a pattern as its |
2568 | first argument. Compare L</split>. | |
a0d0e21e | 2569 | |
aa689395 | 2570 | =item keys HASH |
d74e8afc | 2571 | X<keys> X<key> |
aa689395 | 2572 | |
aeedbbed NC |
2573 | =item keys ARRAY |
2574 | ||
2575 | Returns a list consisting of all the keys of the named hash, or the indices | |
2576 | of an array. (In scalar context, returns the number of keys or indices.) | |
504f80c1 | 2577 | |
aeedbbed | 2578 | The keys of a hash are returned in an apparently random order. The actual |
504f80c1 JH |
2579 | random order is subject to change in future versions of perl, but it |
2580 | is guaranteed to be the same order as either the C<values> or C<each> | |
4546b9e6 JH |
2581 | function produces (given that the hash has not been modified). Since |
2582 | Perl 5.8.1 the ordering is different even between different runs of | |
2583 | Perl for security reasons (see L<perlsec/"Algorithmic Complexity | |
d6df3700 | 2584 | Attacks">). |
504f80c1 | 2585 | |
aeedbbed | 2586 | As a side effect, calling keys() resets the HASH or ARRAY's internal iterator |
cf264981 SP |
2587 | (see L</each>). In particular, calling keys() in void context resets |
2588 | the iterator with no other overhead. | |
a0d0e21e | 2589 | |
aa689395 | 2590 | Here is yet another way to print your environment: |
a0d0e21e LW |
2591 | |
2592 | @keys = keys %ENV; | |
2593 | @values = values %ENV; | |
b76cc8ba | 2594 | while (@keys) { |
a9a5a0dc | 2595 | print pop(@keys), '=', pop(@values), "\n"; |
a0d0e21e LW |
2596 | } |
2597 | ||
2598 | or how about sorted by key: | |
2599 | ||
2600 | foreach $key (sort(keys %ENV)) { | |
a9a5a0dc | 2601 | print $key, '=', $ENV{$key}, "\n"; |
a0d0e21e LW |
2602 | } |
2603 | ||
8ea1e5d4 GS |
2604 | The returned values are copies of the original keys in the hash, so |
2605 | modifying them will not affect the original hash. Compare L</values>. | |
2606 | ||
19799a22 | 2607 | To sort a hash by value, you'll need to use a C<sort> function. |
aa689395 | 2608 | Here's a descending numeric sort of a hash by its values: |
4633a7c4 | 2609 | |
5a964f20 | 2610 | foreach $key (sort { $hash{$b} <=> $hash{$a} } keys %hash) { |
a9a5a0dc | 2611 | printf "%4d %s\n", $hash{$key}, $key; |
4633a7c4 LW |
2612 | } |
2613 | ||
19799a22 | 2614 | As an lvalue C<keys> allows you to increase the number of hash buckets |
aa689395 | 2615 | allocated for the given hash. This can gain you a measure of efficiency if |
2616 | you know the hash is going to get big. (This is similar to pre-extending | |
2617 | an array by assigning a larger number to $#array.) If you say | |
55497cff | 2618 | |
2619 | keys %hash = 200; | |
2620 | ||
ab192400 GS |
2621 | then C<%hash> will have at least 200 buckets allocated for it--256 of them, |
2622 | in fact, since it rounds up to the next power of two. These | |
55497cff | 2623 | buckets will be retained even if you do C<%hash = ()>, use C<undef |
2624 | %hash> if you want to free the storage while C<%hash> is still in scope. | |
2625 | You can't shrink the number of buckets allocated for the hash using | |
19799a22 | 2626 | C<keys> in this way (but you needn't worry about doing this by accident, |
aeedbbed NC |
2627 | as trying has no effect). C<keys @array> in an lvalue context is a syntax |
2628 | error. | |
55497cff | 2629 | |
19799a22 | 2630 | See also C<each>, C<values> and C<sort>. |
ab192400 | 2631 | |
b350dd2f | 2632 | =item kill SIGNAL, LIST |
d74e8afc | 2633 | X<kill> X<signal> |
a0d0e21e | 2634 | |
b350dd2f | 2635 | Sends a signal to a list of processes. Returns the number of |
517db077 GS |
2636 | processes successfully signaled (which is not necessarily the |
2637 | same as the number actually killed). | |
a0d0e21e LW |
2638 | |
2639 | $cnt = kill 1, $child1, $child2; | |
2640 | kill 9, @goners; | |
2641 | ||
70fb64f6 | 2642 | If SIGNAL is zero, no signal is sent to the process, but the kill(2) |
6cb9d3e4 | 2643 | system call will check whether it's possible to send a signal to it (that |
70fb64f6 RGS |
2644 | means, to be brief, that the process is owned by the same user, or we are |
2645 | the super-user). This is a useful way to check that a child process is | |
81fd35db DN |
2646 | alive (even if only as a zombie) and hasn't changed its UID. See |
2647 | L<perlport> for notes on the portability of this construct. | |
b350dd2f | 2648 | |
e2c0f81f DG |
2649 | Unlike in the shell, if SIGNAL is negative, it kills process groups instead |
2650 | of processes. That means you usually want to use positive not negative signals. | |
2651 | You may also use a signal name in quotes. | |
2652 | ||
2653 | The behavior of kill when a I<PROCESS> number is zero or negative depends on | |
2654 | the operating system. For example, on POSIX-conforming systems, zero will | |
2655 | signal the current process group and -1 will signal all processes. | |
1e9c1022 JL |
2656 | |
2657 | See L<perlipc/"Signals"> for more details. | |
a0d0e21e LW |
2658 | |
2659 | =item last LABEL | |
d74e8afc | 2660 | X<last> X<break> |
a0d0e21e LW |
2661 | |
2662 | =item last | |
2663 | ||
2664 | The C<last> command is like the C<break> statement in C (as used in | |
2665 | loops); it immediately exits the loop in question. If the LABEL is | |
2666 | omitted, the command refers to the innermost enclosing loop. The | |
2667 | C<continue> block, if any, is not executed: | |
2668 | ||
4633a7c4 | 2669 | LINE: while (<STDIN>) { |
a9a5a0dc VP |
2670 | last LINE if /^$/; # exit when done with header |
2671 | #... | |
a0d0e21e LW |
2672 | } |
2673 | ||
4968c1e4 | 2674 | C<last> cannot be used to exit a block which returns a value such as |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
2675 | C<eval {}>, C<sub {}> or C<do {}>, and should not be used to exit |
2676 | a grep() or map() operation. | |
4968c1e4 | 2677 | |
6c1372ed GS |
2678 | Note that a block by itself is semantically identical to a loop |
2679 | that executes once. Thus C<last> can be used to effect an early | |
2680 | exit out of such a block. | |
2681 | ||
98293880 JH |
2682 | See also L</continue> for an illustration of how C<last>, C<next>, and |
2683 | C<redo> work. | |
1d2dff63 | 2684 | |
a0d0e21e | 2685 | =item lc EXPR |
d74e8afc | 2686 | X<lc> X<lowercase> |
a0d0e21e | 2687 | |
54310121 | 2688 | =item lc |
bbce6d69 | 2689 | |
d1be9408 | 2690 | Returns a lowercased version of EXPR. This is the internal function |
e1b711da | 2691 | implementing the C<\L> escape in double-quoted strings. |
a0d0e21e | 2692 | |
7660c0ab | 2693 | If EXPR is omitted, uses C<$_>. |
bbce6d69 | 2694 | |
e1b711da KW |
2695 | What gets returned depends on several factors: |
2696 | ||
2697 | =over | |
2698 | ||
2699 | =item If C<use bytes> is in effect: | |
2700 | ||
2701 | =over | |
2702 | ||
2703 | =item On EBCDIC platforms | |
2704 | ||
2705 | The results are what the C language system call C<tolower()> returns. | |
2706 | ||
2707 | =item On ASCII platforms | |
2708 | ||
2709 | The results follow ASCII semantics. Only characters C<A-Z> change, to C<a-z> | |
2710 | respectively. | |
2711 | ||
2712 | =back | |
2713 | ||
2714 | =item Otherwise, If EXPR has the UTF8 flag set | |
2715 | ||
2716 | If the current package has a subroutine named C<ToLower>, it will be used to | |
2717 | change the case (See L<perlunicode/User-Defined Case Mappings>.) | |
2718 | Otherwise Unicode semantics are used for the case change. | |
2719 | ||
2720 | =item Otherwise, if C<use locale> is in effect | |
2721 | ||
2722 | Respects current LC_CTYPE locale. See L<perllocale>. | |
2723 | ||
2724 | =item Otherwise, if C<use feature 'unicode_strings'> is in effect: | |
2725 | ||
2726 | Unicode semantics are used for the case change. Any subroutine named | |
2727 | C<ToLower> will not be used. | |
2728 | ||
2729 | =item Otherwise: | |
2730 | ||
2731 | =over | |
2732 | ||
2733 | =item On EBCDIC platforms | |
2734 | ||
2735 | The results are what the C language system call C<tolower()> returns. | |
2736 | ||
2737 | =item On ASCII platforms | |
2738 | ||
2739 | ASCII semantics are used for the case change. The lowercase of any character | |
2740 | outside the ASCII range is the character itself. | |
2741 | ||
2742 | =back | |
2743 | ||
2744 | =back | |
2745 | ||
a0d0e21e | 2746 | =item lcfirst EXPR |
d74e8afc | 2747 | X<lcfirst> X<lowercase> |
a0d0e21e | 2748 | |
54310121 | 2749 | =item lcfirst |
bbce6d69 | 2750 | |
ad0029c4 JH |
2751 | Returns the value of EXPR with the first character lowercased. This |
2752 | is the internal function implementing the C<\l> escape in | |
e1b711da | 2753 | double-quoted strings. |
a0d0e21e | 2754 | |
7660c0ab | 2755 | If EXPR is omitted, uses C<$_>. |
bbce6d69 | 2756 | |
e1b711da KW |
2757 | This function behaves the same way under various pragma, such as in a locale, |
2758 | as L</lc> does. | |
2759 | ||
a0d0e21e | 2760 | =item length EXPR |
d74e8afc | 2761 | X<length> X<size> |
a0d0e21e | 2762 | |
54310121 | 2763 | =item length |
bbce6d69 | 2764 | |
974da8e5 | 2765 | Returns the length in I<characters> of the value of EXPR. If EXPR is |
9f621bb0 NC |
2766 | omitted, returns length of C<$_>. If EXPR is undefined, returns C<undef>. |
2767 | Note that this cannot be used on an entire array or hash to find out how | |
2768 | many elements these have. For that, use C<scalar @array> and C<scalar keys | |
2769 | %hash> respectively. | |
a0d0e21e | 2770 | |
974da8e5 JH |
2771 | Note the I<characters>: if the EXPR is in Unicode, you will get the |
2772 | number of characters, not the number of bytes. To get the length | |
2575c402 JW |
2773 | of the internal string in bytes, use C<bytes::length(EXPR)>, see |
2774 | L<bytes>. Note that the internal encoding is variable, and the number | |
2775 | of bytes usually meaningless. To get the number of bytes that the | |
2776 | string would have when encoded as UTF-8, use | |
2777 | C<length(Encoding::encode_utf8(EXPR))>. | |
974da8e5 | 2778 | |
a0d0e21e | 2779 | =item link OLDFILE,NEWFILE |
d74e8afc | 2780 | X<link> |
a0d0e21e | 2781 | |
19799a22 | 2782 | Creates a new filename linked to the old filename. Returns true for |
b76cc8ba | 2783 | success, false otherwise. |
a0d0e21e LW |
2784 | |
2785 | =item listen SOCKET,QUEUESIZE | |
d74e8afc | 2786 | X<listen> |
a0d0e21e | 2787 | |
19799a22 | 2788 | Does the same thing that the listen system call does. Returns true if |
b76cc8ba | 2789 | it succeeded, false otherwise. See the example in |
cea6626f | 2790 | L<perlipc/"Sockets: Client/Server Communication">. |
a0d0e21e LW |
2791 | |
2792 | =item local EXPR | |
d74e8afc | 2793 | X<local> |
a0d0e21e | 2794 | |
19799a22 | 2795 | You really probably want to be using C<my> instead, because C<local> isn't |
b76cc8ba | 2796 | what most people think of as "local". See |
13a2d996 | 2797 | L<perlsub/"Private Variables via my()"> for details. |
2b5ab1e7 | 2798 | |
5a964f20 TC |
2799 | A local modifies the listed variables to be local to the enclosing |
2800 | block, file, or eval. If more than one value is listed, the list must | |
2801 | be placed in parentheses. See L<perlsub/"Temporary Values via local()"> | |
2802 | for details, including issues with tied arrays and hashes. | |
a0d0e21e | 2803 | |
d361fafa VP |
2804 | The C<delete local EXPR> construct can also be used to localize the deletion |
2805 | of array/hash elements to the current block. | |
2806 | See L<perlsub/"Localized deletion of elements of composite types">. | |
2807 | ||
a0d0e21e | 2808 | =item localtime EXPR |
435fbc73 | 2809 | X<localtime> X<ctime> |
a0d0e21e | 2810 | |
ba053783 AL |
2811 | =item localtime |
2812 | ||
19799a22 | 2813 | Converts a time as returned by the time function to a 9-element list |
5f05dabc | 2814 | with the time analyzed for the local time zone. Typically used as |
a0d0e21e LW |
2815 | follows: |
2816 | ||
54310121 | 2817 | # 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 |
a0d0e21e | 2818 | ($sec,$min,$hour,$mday,$mon,$year,$wday,$yday,$isdst) = |
ba053783 | 2819 | localtime(time); |
a0d0e21e | 2820 | |
48a26b3a | 2821 | All list elements are numeric, and come straight out of the C `struct |
ba053783 AL |
2822 | tm'. C<$sec>, C<$min>, and C<$hour> are the seconds, minutes, and hours |
2823 | of the specified time. | |
48a26b3a | 2824 | |
ba053783 AL |
2825 | C<$mday> is the day of the month, and C<$mon> is the month itself, in |
2826 | the range C<0..11> with 0 indicating January and 11 indicating December. | |
2827 | This makes it easy to get a month name from a list: | |
54310121 | 2828 | |
ba053783 AL |
2829 | my @abbr = qw( Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec ); |
2830 | print "$abbr[$mon] $mday"; | |
2831 | # $mon=9, $mday=18 gives "Oct 18" | |
abd75f24 | 2832 | |
ba053783 AL |
2833 | C<$year> is the number of years since 1900, not just the last two digits |
2834 | of the year. That is, C<$year> is C<123> in year 2023. The proper way | |
2835 | to get a complete 4-digit year is simply: | |
abd75f24 | 2836 | |
ba053783 | 2837 | $year += 1900; |
abd75f24 | 2838 | |
435fbc73 GS |
2839 | Otherwise you create non-Y2K-compliant programs--and you wouldn't want |
2840 | to do that, would you? | |
2841 | ||
ba053783 AL |
2842 | To get the last two digits of the year (e.g., '01' in 2001) do: |
2843 | ||
2844 | $year = sprintf("%02d", $year % 100); | |
2845 | ||
2846 | C<$wday> is the day of the week, with 0 indicating Sunday and 3 indicating | |
2847 | Wednesday. C<$yday> is the day of the year, in the range C<0..364> | |
2848 | (or C<0..365> in leap years.) | |
2849 | ||
2850 | C<$isdst> is true if the specified time occurs during Daylight Saving | |
2851 | Time, false otherwise. | |
abd75f24 | 2852 | |
e1998452 | 2853 | If EXPR is omitted, C<localtime()> uses the current time (as returned |
e3176d09 | 2854 | by time(3)). |
a0d0e21e | 2855 | |
48a26b3a | 2856 | In scalar context, C<localtime()> returns the ctime(3) value: |
a0d0e21e | 2857 | |
5f05dabc | 2858 | $now_string = localtime; # e.g., "Thu Oct 13 04:54:34 1994" |
a0d0e21e | 2859 | |
fe86afc2 NC |
2860 | This scalar value is B<not> locale dependent but is a Perl builtin. For GMT |
2861 | instead of local time use the L</gmtime> builtin. See also the | |
2862 | C<Time::Local> module (to convert the second, minutes, hours, ... back to | |
2863 | the integer value returned by time()), and the L<POSIX> module's strftime(3) | |
2864 | and mktime(3) functions. | |
2865 | ||
2866 | To get somewhat similar but locale dependent date strings, set up your | |
2867 | locale environment variables appropriately (please see L<perllocale>) and | |
2868 | try for example: | |
a3cb178b | 2869 | |
5a964f20 | 2870 | use POSIX qw(strftime); |
2b5ab1e7 | 2871 | $now_string = strftime "%a %b %e %H:%M:%S %Y", localtime; |
fe86afc2 NC |
2872 | # or for GMT formatted appropriately for your locale: |
2873 | $now_string = strftime "%a %b %e %H:%M:%S %Y", gmtime; | |
a3cb178b GS |
2874 | |
2875 | Note that the C<%a> and C<%b>, the short forms of the day of the week | |
2876 | and the month of the year, may not necessarily be three characters wide. | |
a0d0e21e | 2877 | |
62aa5637 MS |
2878 | See L<perlport/localtime> for portability concerns. |
2879 | ||
435fbc73 GS |
2880 | The L<Time::gmtime> and L<Time::localtime> modules provides a convenient, |
2881 | by-name access mechanism to the gmtime() and localtime() functions, | |
2882 | respectively. | |
2883 | ||
2884 | For a comprehensive date and time representation look at the | |
2885 | L<DateTime> module on CPAN. | |
2886 | ||
07698885 | 2887 | =item lock THING |
d74e8afc | 2888 | X<lock> |
19799a22 | 2889 | |
01e6739c | 2890 | This function places an advisory lock on a shared variable, or referenced |
03730085 | 2891 | object contained in I<THING> until the lock goes out of scope. |
a6d5524e | 2892 | |
f3a23afb | 2893 | lock() is a "weak keyword" : this means that if you've defined a function |
67408cae | 2894 | by this name (before any calls to it), that function will be called |
03730085 AB |
2895 | instead. (However, if you've said C<use threads>, lock() is always a |
2896 | keyword.) See L<threads>. | |
19799a22 | 2897 | |
a0d0e21e | 2898 | =item log EXPR |
d74e8afc | 2899 | X<log> X<logarithm> X<e> X<ln> X<base> |
a0d0e21e | 2900 | |
54310121 | 2901 | =item log |
bbce6d69 | 2902 | |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
2903 | Returns the natural logarithm (base I<e>) of EXPR. If EXPR is omitted, |
2904 | returns log of C<$_>. To get the log of another base, use basic algebra: | |
19799a22 | 2905 | The base-N log of a number is equal to the natural log of that number |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
2906 | divided by the natural log of N. For example: |
2907 | ||
2908 | sub log10 { | |
a9a5a0dc VP |
2909 | my $n = shift; |
2910 | return log($n)/log(10); | |
b76cc8ba | 2911 | } |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
2912 | |
2913 | See also L</exp> for the inverse operation. | |
a0d0e21e | 2914 | |
a0d0e21e | 2915 | =item lstat EXPR |
d74e8afc | 2916 | X<lstat> |
a0d0e21e | 2917 | |
54310121 | 2918 | =item lstat |
bbce6d69 | 2919 | |
19799a22 | 2920 | Does the same thing as the C<stat> function (including setting the |
5a964f20 TC |
2921 | special C<_> filehandle) but stats a symbolic link instead of the file |
2922 | the symbolic link points to. If symbolic links are unimplemented on | |
c837d5b4 DP |
2923 | your system, a normal C<stat> is done. For much more detailed |
2924 | information, please see the documentation for C<stat>. | |
a0d0e21e | 2925 | |
7660c0ab | 2926 | If EXPR is omitted, stats C<$_>. |
bbce6d69 | 2927 | |
a0d0e21e LW |
2928 | =item m// |
2929 | ||
9f4b9cd0 | 2930 | The match operator. See L<perlop/"Regexp Quote-Like Operators">. |
a0d0e21e LW |
2931 | |
2932 | =item map BLOCK LIST | |
d74e8afc | 2933 | X<map> |
a0d0e21e LW |
2934 | |
2935 | =item map EXPR,LIST | |
2936 | ||
19799a22 GS |
2937 | Evaluates the BLOCK or EXPR for each element of LIST (locally setting |
2938 | C<$_> to each element) and returns the list value composed of the | |
2939 | results of each such evaluation. In scalar context, returns the | |
2940 | total number of elements so generated. Evaluates BLOCK or EXPR in | |
2941 | list context, so each element of LIST may produce zero, one, or | |
2942 | more elements in the returned value. | |
dd99ebda | 2943 | |
a0d0e21e LW |
2944 | @chars = map(chr, @nums); |
2945 | ||
2946 | translates a list of numbers to the corresponding characters. And | |
2947 | ||
d8216f19 | 2948 | %hash = map { get_a_key_for($_) => $_ } @array; |
a0d0e21e LW |
2949 | |
2950 | is just a funny way to write | |
2951 | ||
2952 | %hash = (); | |
d8216f19 | 2953 | foreach (@array) { |
a9a5a0dc | 2954 | $hash{get_a_key_for($_)} = $_; |
a0d0e21e LW |
2955 | } |
2956 | ||
be3174d2 GS |
2957 | Note that C<$_> is an alias to the list value, so it can be used to |
2958 | modify the elements of the LIST. While this is useful and supported, | |
2959 | it can cause bizarre results if the elements of LIST are not variables. | |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
2960 | Using a regular C<foreach> loop for this purpose would be clearer in |
2961 | most cases. See also L</grep> for an array composed of those items of | |
2962 | the original list for which the BLOCK or EXPR evaluates to true. | |
fb73857a | 2963 | |
a4fb8298 | 2964 | If C<$_> is lexical in the scope where the C<map> appears (because it has |
d8216f19 RGS |
2965 | been declared with C<my $_>), then, in addition to being locally aliased to |
2966 | the list elements, C<$_> keeps being lexical inside the block; that is, it | |
a4fb8298 RGS |
2967 | can't be seen from the outside, avoiding any potential side-effects. |
2968 | ||
205fdb4d NC |
2969 | C<{> starts both hash references and blocks, so C<map { ...> could be either |
2970 | the start of map BLOCK LIST or map EXPR, LIST. Because perl doesn't look | |
2971 | ahead for the closing C<}> it has to take a guess at which its dealing with | |
2972 | based what it finds just after the C<{>. Usually it gets it right, but if it | |
2973 | doesn't it won't realize something is wrong until it gets to the C<}> and | |
2974 | encounters the missing (or unexpected) comma. The syntax error will be | |
2975 | reported close to the C<}> but you'll need to change something near the C<{> | |
2976 | such as using a unary C<+> to give perl some help: | |
2977 | ||
2978 | %hash = map { "\L$_", 1 } @array # perl guesses EXPR. wrong | |
2979 | %hash = map { +"\L$_", 1 } @array # perl guesses BLOCK. right | |
2980 | %hash = map { ("\L$_", 1) } @array # this also works | |
2981 | %hash = map { lc($_), 1 } @array # as does this. | |
2982 | %hash = map +( lc($_), 1 ), @array # this is EXPR and works! | |
cea6626f | 2983 | |
205fdb4d NC |
2984 | %hash = map ( lc($_), 1 ), @array # evaluates to (1, @array) |
2985 | ||
d8216f19 | 2986 | or to force an anon hash constructor use C<+{>: |
205fdb4d NC |
2987 | |
2988 | @hashes = map +{ lc($_), 1 }, @array # EXPR, so needs , at end | |
2989 | ||
2990 | and you get list of anonymous hashes each with only 1 entry. | |
2991 | ||
19799a22 | 2992 | =item mkdir FILENAME,MASK |
d74e8afc | 2993 | X<mkdir> X<md> X<directory, create> |
a0d0e21e | 2994 | |
5a211162 GS |
2995 | =item mkdir FILENAME |
2996 | ||
491873e5 RGS |
2997 | =item mkdir |
2998 | ||
0591cd52 | 2999 | Creates the directory specified by FILENAME, with permissions |
19799a22 GS |
3000 | specified by MASK (as modified by C<umask>). If it succeeds it |
3001 | returns true, otherwise it returns false and sets C<$!> (errno). | |
491873e5 RGS |
3002 | If omitted, MASK defaults to 0777. If omitted, FILENAME defaults |
3003 | to C<$_>. | |
0591cd52 | 3004 | |
19799a22 | 3005 | In general, it is better to create directories with permissive MASK, |
0591cd52 | 3006 | and let the user modify that with their C<umask>, than it is to supply |
19799a22 | 3007 | a restrictive MASK and give the user no way to be more permissive. |
0591cd52 NT |
3008 | The exceptions to this rule are when the file or directory should be |
3009 | kept private (mail files, for instance). The perlfunc(1) entry on | |
19799a22 | 3010 | C<umask> discusses the choice of MASK in more detail. |
a0d0e21e | 3011 | |
cc1852e8 JH |
3012 | Note that according to the POSIX 1003.1-1996 the FILENAME may have any |
3013 | number of trailing slashes. Some operating and filesystems do not get | |
3014 | this right, so Perl automatically removes all trailing slashes to keep | |
3015 | everyone happy. | |
3016 | ||
dd184578 RGS |
3017 | In order to recursively create a directory structure look at |
3018 | the C<mkpath> function of the L<File::Path> module. | |
3019 | ||
a0d0e21e | 3020 | =item msgctl ID,CMD,ARG |
d74e8afc | 3021 | X<msgctl> |
a0d0e21e | 3022 | |
f86cebdf | 3023 | Calls the System V IPC function msgctl(2). You'll probably have to say |
0ade1984 JH |
3024 | |
3025 | use IPC::SysV; | |
3026 | ||
7660c0ab | 3027 | first to get the correct constant definitions. If CMD is C<IPC_STAT>, |
cf264981 | 3028 | then ARG must be a variable that will hold the returned C<msqid_ds> |
951ba7fe GS |
3029 | structure. Returns like C<ioctl>: the undefined value for error, |
3030 | C<"0 but true"> for zero, or the actual return value otherwise. See also | |
4755096e | 3031 | L<perlipc/"SysV IPC">, C<IPC::SysV>, and C<IPC::Semaphore> documentation. |
a0d0e21e LW |
3032 | |
3033 | =item msgget KEY,FLAGS | |
d74e8afc | 3034 | X<msgget> |
a0d0e21e | 3035 | |
f86cebdf | 3036 | Calls the System V IPC function msgget(2). Returns the message queue |
4755096e GS |
3037 | id, or the undefined value if there is an error. See also |
3038 | L<perlipc/"SysV IPC"> and C<IPC::SysV> and C<IPC::Msg> documentation. | |
a0d0e21e | 3039 | |
a0d0e21e | 3040 | =item msgrcv ID,VAR,SIZE,TYPE,FLAGS |
d74e8afc | 3041 | X<msgrcv> |
a0d0e21e LW |
3042 | |
3043 | Calls the System V IPC function msgrcv to receive a message from | |
3044 | message queue ID into variable VAR with a maximum message size of | |
41d6edb2 JH |
3045 | SIZE. Note that when a message is received, the message type as a |
3046 | native long integer will be the first thing in VAR, followed by the | |
3047 | actual message. This packing may be opened with C<unpack("l! a*")>. | |
3048 | Taints the variable. Returns true if successful, or false if there is | |
4755096e GS |
3049 | an error. See also L<perlipc/"SysV IPC">, C<IPC::SysV>, and |
3050 | C<IPC::SysV::Msg> documentation. | |
41d6edb2 JH |
3051 | |
3052 | =item msgsnd ID,MSG,FLAGS | |
d74e8afc | 3053 | X<msgsnd> |
41d6edb2 JH |
3054 | |
3055 | Calls the System V IPC function msgsnd to send the message MSG to the | |
3056 | message queue ID. MSG must begin with the native long integer message | |
3057 | type, and be followed by the length of the actual message, and finally | |
3058 | the message itself. This kind of packing can be achieved with | |
3059 | C<pack("l! a*", $type, $message)>. Returns true if successful, | |
3060 | or false if there is an error. See also C<IPC::SysV> | |
3061 | and C<IPC::SysV::Msg> documentation. | |
a0d0e21e LW |
3062 | |
3063 | =item my EXPR | |
d74e8afc | 3064 | X<my> |
a0d0e21e | 3065 | |
307ea6df JH |
3066 | =item my TYPE EXPR |
3067 | ||
1d2de774 | 3068 | =item my EXPR : ATTRS |
09bef843 | 3069 | |
1d2de774 | 3070 | =item my TYPE EXPR : ATTRS |
307ea6df | 3071 | |
19799a22 | 3072 | A C<my> declares the listed variables to be local (lexically) to the |
1d2de774 JH |
3073 | enclosing block, file, or C<eval>. If more than one value is listed, |
3074 | the list must be placed in parentheses. | |
307ea6df | 3075 | |
1d2de774 JH |
3076 | The exact semantics and interface of TYPE and ATTRS are still |
3077 | evolving. TYPE is currently bound to the use of C<fields> pragma, | |
307ea6df JH |
3078 | and attributes are handled using the C<attributes> pragma, or starting |
3079 | from Perl 5.8.0 also via the C<Attribute::Handlers> module. See | |
3080 | L<perlsub/"Private Variables via my()"> for details, and L<fields>, | |
3081 | L<attributes>, and L<Attribute::Handlers>. | |
4633a7c4 | 3082 | |
a0d0e21e | 3083 | =item next LABEL |
d74e8afc | 3084 | X<next> X<continue> |
a0d0e21e LW |
3085 | |
3086 | =item next | |
3087 | ||
3088 | The C<next> command is like the C<continue> statement in C; it starts | |
3089 | the next iteration of the loop: | |
3090 | ||
4633a7c4 | 3091 | LINE: while (<STDIN>) { |
a9a5a0dc VP |
3092 | next LINE if /^#/; # discard comments |
3093 | #... | |
a0d0e21e LW |
3094 | } |
3095 | ||
3096 | Note that if there were a C<continue> block on the above, it would get | |
3097 | executed even on discarded lines. If the LABEL is omitted, the command | |
3098 | refers to the innermost enclosing loop. | |
3099 | ||
4968c1e4 | 3100 | C<next> cannot be used to exit a block which returns a value such as |
2b5ab1e7 TC |
3101 | C<eval {}>, C<sub {}> or C<do {}>, and should not be used to exit |
3102 | a grep() or map() operation. | |
4968c1e4 | 3103 | |
6c1372ed GS |
3104 | Note that a block by itself is semantically identical to a loop |
3105 | that executes once. Thus C<next> will exit such a block early. | |
3106 | ||
98293880 JH |
3107 | See also L</continue> for an illustration of how C<last>, C<next>, and |
3108 | C<redo> work. | |
1d2dff63 | 3109 | |
4a66ea5a | 3110 | =item no Module VERSION LIST |
d74e8afc | 3111 | X<no> |
4a66ea5a RGS |
3112 | |
3113 | =item no Module VERSION | |
3114 | ||
a0d0e21e LW |
3115 | =item no Module LIST |
3116 | ||
4a66ea5a RGS |
3117 | =item no Module |
3118 | ||
c986422f RGS |
3119 | =item no VERSION |
3120 | ||
593b9c14 | 3121 | See the C<use> function, of which C<no> is the opposite. |
a0d0e21e LW |
3122 | |
3123 | =item oct EXPR | |
d74e8afc | 3124 | X<oct> X<octal> X<hex> X<hexadecimal> X<binary> X<bin> |
a0d0e21e | 3125 | |
54310121 | 3126 | =item oct |
bbce6d69 | 3127 | |
4633a7c4 | 3128 | Interprets EXPR as an octal string and returns the corresponding |
4f19785b WSI |
3129 | value. (If EXPR happens to start off with C<0x>, interprets it as a |
3130 | hex string. If EXPR starts off with C<0b>, it is interpreted as a | |