This is a live mirror of the Perl 5 development currently hosted at https://github.com/perl/perl5
Add Mac OS X known failures to perldelta.
[perl5.git] / pod / perlfunc.pod
CommitLineData
a0d0e21e
LW
1=head1 NAME
2
3perlfunc - Perl builtin functions
4
5=head1 DESCRIPTION
6
7The functions in this section can serve as terms in an expression.
8They fall into two major categories: list operators and named unary
9operators. These differ in their precedence relationship with a
10following comma. (See the precedence table in L<perlop>.) List
11operators take more than one argument, while unary operators can never
12take more than one argument. Thus, a comma terminates the argument of
13a unary operator, but merely separates the arguments of a list
14operator. A unary operator generally provides a scalar context to its
2b5ab1e7 15argument, while a list operator may provide either scalar or list
a0d0e21e 16contexts for its arguments. If it does both, the scalar arguments will
5f05dabc 17be first, and the list argument will follow. (Note that there can ever
0f31cffe 18be only one such list argument.) For instance, splice() has three scalar
2b5ab1e7
TC
19arguments followed by a list, whereas gethostbyname() has four scalar
20arguments.
a0d0e21e
LW
21
22In the syntax descriptions that follow, list operators that expect a
23list (and provide list context for the elements of the list) are shown
24with LIST as an argument. Such a list may consist of any combination
25of scalar arguments or list values; the list values will be included
26in the list as if each individual element were interpolated at that
27point in the list, forming a longer single-dimensional list value.
28Elements of the LIST should be separated by commas.
29
30Any function in the list below may be used either with or without
31parentheses around its arguments. (The syntax descriptions omit the
5f05dabc 32parentheses.) If you use the parentheses, the simple (but occasionally
19799a22 33surprising) rule is this: It I<looks> like a function, therefore it I<is> a
a0d0e21e
LW
34function, and precedence doesn't matter. Otherwise it's a list
35operator or unary operator, and precedence does matter. And whitespace
36between the function and left parenthesis doesn't count--so you need to
37be careful sometimes:
38
68dc0745 39 print 1+2+4; # Prints 7.
40 print(1+2) + 4; # Prints 3.
41 print (1+2)+4; # Also prints 3!
42 print +(1+2)+4; # Prints 7.
43 print ((1+2)+4); # Prints 7.
a0d0e21e
LW
44
45If you run Perl with the B<-w> switch it can warn you about this. For
46example, the third line above produces:
47
48 print (...) interpreted as function at - line 1.
49 Useless use of integer addition in void context at - line 1.
50
2b5ab1e7
TC
51A few functions take no arguments at all, and therefore work as neither
52unary nor list operators. These include such functions as C<time>
53and C<endpwent>. For example, C<time+86_400> always means
54C<time() + 86_400>.
55
a0d0e21e 56For functions that can be used in either a scalar or list context,
54310121 57nonabortive failure is generally indicated in a scalar context by
a0d0e21e
LW
58returning the undefined value, and in a list context by returning the
59null list.
60
5a964f20
TC
61Remember the following important rule: There is B<no rule> that relates
62the behavior of an expression in list context to its behavior in scalar
63context, or vice versa. It might do two totally different things.
a0d0e21e 64Each operator and function decides which sort of value it would be most
2b5ab1e7 65appropriate to return in scalar context. Some operators return the
5a964f20 66length of the list that would have been returned in list context. Some
a0d0e21e
LW
67operators return the first value in the list. Some operators return the
68last value in the list. Some operators return a count of successful
69operations. In general, they do what you want, unless you want
70consistency.
71
d1be9408 72A named array in scalar context is quite different from what would at
5a964f20
TC
73first glance appear to be a list in scalar context. You can't get a list
74like C<(1,2,3)> into being in scalar context, because the compiler knows
75the context at compile time. It would generate the scalar comma operator
76there, not the list construction version of the comma. That means it
77was never a list to start with.
78
79In general, functions in Perl that serve as wrappers for system calls
f86cebdf 80of the same name (like chown(2), fork(2), closedir(2), etc.) all return
5a964f20
TC
81true when they succeed and C<undef> otherwise, as is usually mentioned
82in the descriptions below. This is different from the C interfaces,
19799a22
GS
83which return C<-1> on failure. Exceptions to this rule are C<wait>,
84C<waitpid>, and C<syscall>. System calls also set the special C<$!>
5a964f20
TC
85variable on failure. Other functions do not, except accidentally.
86
cb1a09d0
AD
87=head2 Perl Functions by Category
88
89Here are Perl's functions (including things that look like
5a964f20 90functions, like some keywords and named operators)
cb1a09d0
AD
91arranged by category. Some functions appear in more
92than one place.
93
13a2d996 94=over 4
cb1a09d0
AD
95
96=item Functions for SCALARs or strings
97
22fae026 98C<chomp>, C<chop>, C<chr>, C<crypt>, C<hex>, C<index>, C<lc>, C<lcfirst>,
945c54fd
JH
99C<length>, C<oct>, C<ord>, C<pack>, C<q/STRING/>, C<qq/STRING/>, C<reverse>,
100C<rindex>, C<sprintf>, C<substr>, C<tr///>, C<uc>, C<ucfirst>, C<y///>
cb1a09d0
AD
101
102=item Regular expressions and pattern matching
103
ab4f32c2 104C<m//>, C<pos>, C<quotemeta>, C<s///>, C<split>, C<study>, C<qr//>
cb1a09d0
AD
105
106=item Numeric functions
107
22fae026
TM
108C<abs>, C<atan2>, C<cos>, C<exp>, C<hex>, C<int>, C<log>, C<oct>, C<rand>,
109C<sin>, C<sqrt>, C<srand>
cb1a09d0
AD
110
111=item Functions for real @ARRAYs
112
22fae026 113C<pop>, C<push>, C<shift>, C<splice>, C<unshift>
cb1a09d0
AD
114
115=item Functions for list data
116
ab4f32c2 117C<grep>, C<join>, C<map>, C<qw/STRING/>, C<reverse>, C<sort>, C<unpack>
cb1a09d0
AD
118
119=item Functions for real %HASHes
120
22fae026 121C<delete>, C<each>, C<exists>, C<keys>, C<values>
cb1a09d0
AD
122
123=item Input and output functions
124
22fae026
TM
125C<binmode>, C<close>, C<closedir>, C<dbmclose>, C<dbmopen>, C<die>, C<eof>,
126C<fileno>, C<flock>, C<format>, C<getc>, C<print>, C<printf>, C<read>,
127C<readdir>, C<rewinddir>, C<seek>, C<seekdir>, C<select>, C<syscall>,
128C<sysread>, C<sysseek>, C<syswrite>, C<tell>, C<telldir>, C<truncate>,
129C<warn>, C<write>
cb1a09d0
AD
130
131=item Functions for fixed length data or records
132
22fae026 133C<pack>, C<read>, C<syscall>, C<sysread>, C<syswrite>, C<unpack>, C<vec>
cb1a09d0
AD
134
135=item Functions for filehandles, files, or directories
136
22fae026 137C<-I<X>>, C<chdir>, C<chmod>, C<chown>, C<chroot>, C<fcntl>, C<glob>,
5ff3f7a4
GS
138C<ioctl>, C<link>, C<lstat>, C<mkdir>, C<open>, C<opendir>,
139C<readlink>, C<rename>, C<rmdir>, C<stat>, C<symlink>, C<umask>,
140C<unlink>, C<utime>
cb1a09d0
AD
141
142=item Keywords related to the control flow of your perl program
143
98293880
JH
144C<caller>, C<continue>, C<die>, C<do>, C<dump>, C<eval>, C<exit>,
145C<goto>, C<last>, C<next>, C<redo>, C<return>, C<sub>, C<wantarray>
cb1a09d0 146
54310121 147=item Keywords related to scoping
cb1a09d0 148
4375e838 149C<caller>, C<import>, C<local>, C<my>, C<our>, C<package>, C<use>
cb1a09d0
AD
150
151=item Miscellaneous functions
152
4375e838 153C<defined>, C<dump>, C<eval>, C<formline>, C<local>, C<my>, C<our>, C<reset>,
22fae026 154C<scalar>, C<undef>, C<wantarray>
cb1a09d0
AD
155
156=item Functions for processes and process groups
157
22fae026 158C<alarm>, C<exec>, C<fork>, C<getpgrp>, C<getppid>, C<getpriority>, C<kill>,
ab4f32c2 159C<pipe>, C<qx/STRING/>, C<setpgrp>, C<setpriority>, C<sleep>, C<system>,
22fae026 160C<times>, C<wait>, C<waitpid>
cb1a09d0
AD
161
162=item Keywords related to perl modules
163
22fae026 164C<do>, C<import>, C<no>, C<package>, C<require>, C<use>
cb1a09d0
AD
165
166=item Keywords related to classes and object-orientedness
167
22fae026
TM
168C<bless>, C<dbmclose>, C<dbmopen>, C<package>, C<ref>, C<tie>, C<tied>,
169C<untie>, C<use>
cb1a09d0
AD
170
171=item Low-level socket functions
172
22fae026
TM
173C<accept>, C<bind>, C<connect>, C<getpeername>, C<getsockname>,
174C<getsockopt>, C<listen>, C<recv>, C<send>, C<setsockopt>, C<shutdown>,
80cbd5ad 175C<sockatmark>, C<socket>, C<socketpair>
cb1a09d0
AD
176
177=item System V interprocess communication functions
178
22fae026
TM
179C<msgctl>, C<msgget>, C<msgrcv>, C<msgsnd>, C<semctl>, C<semget>, C<semop>,
180C<shmctl>, C<shmget>, C<shmread>, C<shmwrite>
cb1a09d0
AD
181
182=item Fetching user and group info
183
22fae026
TM
184C<endgrent>, C<endhostent>, C<endnetent>, C<endpwent>, C<getgrent>,
185C<getgrgid>, C<getgrnam>, C<getlogin>, C<getpwent>, C<getpwnam>,
186C<getpwuid>, C<setgrent>, C<setpwent>
cb1a09d0
AD
187
188=item Fetching network info
189
22fae026
TM
190C<endprotoent>, C<endservent>, C<gethostbyaddr>, C<gethostbyname>,
191C<gethostent>, C<getnetbyaddr>, C<getnetbyname>, C<getnetent>,
192C<getprotobyname>, C<getprotobynumber>, C<getprotoent>,
193C<getservbyname>, C<getservbyport>, C<getservent>, C<sethostent>,
194C<setnetent>, C<setprotoent>, C<setservent>
cb1a09d0
AD
195
196=item Time-related functions
197
22fae026 198C<gmtime>, C<localtime>, C<time>, C<times>
cb1a09d0 199
37798a01 200=item Functions new in perl5
201
22fae026 202C<abs>, C<bless>, C<chomp>, C<chr>, C<exists>, C<formline>, C<glob>,
b76cc8ba 203C<import>, C<lc>, C<lcfirst>, C<map>, C<my>, C<no>, C<our>, C<prototype>,
4375e838 204C<qx>, C<qw>, C<readline>, C<readpipe>, C<ref>, C<sub*>, C<sysopen>, C<tie>,
22fae026 205C<tied>, C<uc>, C<ucfirst>, C<untie>, C<use>
37798a01 206
207* - C<sub> was a keyword in perl4, but in perl5 it is an
5a964f20 208operator, which can be used in expressions.
37798a01 209
210=item Functions obsoleted in perl5
211
22fae026 212C<dbmclose>, C<dbmopen>
37798a01 213
cb1a09d0
AD
214=back
215
60f9f73c
JH
216=head2 Portability
217
2b5ab1e7
TC
218Perl was born in Unix and can therefore access all common Unix
219system calls. In non-Unix environments, the functionality of some
220Unix system calls may not be available, or details of the available
221functionality may differ slightly. The Perl functions affected
60f9f73c
JH
222by this are:
223
224C<-X>, C<binmode>, C<chmod>, C<chown>, C<chroot>, C<crypt>,
225C<dbmclose>, C<dbmopen>, C<dump>, C<endgrent>, C<endhostent>,
226C<endnetent>, C<endprotoent>, C<endpwent>, C<endservent>, C<exec>,
227C<fcntl>, C<flock>, C<fork>, C<getgrent>, C<getgrgid>, C<gethostent>,
228C<getlogin>, C<getnetbyaddr>, C<getnetbyname>, C<getnetent>,
229C<getppid>, C<getprgp>, C<getpriority>, C<getprotobynumber>,
230C<getprotoent>, C<getpwent>, C<getpwnam>, C<getpwuid>,
231C<getservbyport>, C<getservent>, C<getsockopt>, C<glob>, C<ioctl>,
232C<kill>, C<link>, C<lstat>, C<msgctl>, C<msgget>, C<msgrcv>,
2b5ab1e7 233C<msgsnd>, C<open>, C<pipe>, C<readlink>, C<rename>, C<select>, C<semctl>,
60f9f73c
JH
234C<semget>, C<semop>, C<setgrent>, C<sethostent>, C<setnetent>,
235C<setpgrp>, C<setpriority>, C<setprotoent>, C<setpwent>,
236C<setservent>, C<setsockopt>, C<shmctl>, C<shmget>, C<shmread>,
80cbd5ad
JH
237C<shmwrite>, C<sockatmark>, C<socket>, C<socketpair>,
238C<stat>, C<symlink>, C<syscall>, C<sysopen>, C<system>,
239C<times>, C<truncate>, C<umask>, C<unlink>,
2b5ab1e7 240C<utime>, C<wait>, C<waitpid>
60f9f73c
JH
241
242For more information about the portability of these functions, see
243L<perlport> and other available platform-specific documentation.
244
cb1a09d0
AD
245=head2 Alphabetical Listing of Perl Functions
246
a0d0e21e
LW
247=over 8
248
22fae026 249=item I<-X> FILEHANDLE
a0d0e21e 250
22fae026 251=item I<-X> EXPR
a0d0e21e 252
22fae026 253=item I<-X>
a0d0e21e
LW
254
255A file test, where X is one of the letters listed below. This unary
256operator takes one argument, either a filename or a filehandle, and
257tests the associated file to see if something is true about it. If the
7660c0ab 258argument is omitted, tests C<$_>, except for C<-t>, which tests STDIN.
19799a22 259Unless otherwise documented, it returns C<1> for true and C<''> for false, or
a0d0e21e
LW
260the undefined value if the file doesn't exist. Despite the funny
261names, precedence is the same as any other named unary operator, and
262the argument may be parenthesized like any other unary operator. The
263operator may be any of:
7e778d91
IZ
264X<-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>
265X<-S>X<-b>X<-c>X<-t>X<-u>X<-g>X<-k>X<-T>X<-B>X<-M>X<-A>X<-C>
a0d0e21e
LW
266
267 -r File is readable by effective uid/gid.
268 -w File is writable by effective uid/gid.
269 -x File is executable by effective uid/gid.
270 -o File is owned by effective uid.
271
272 -R File is readable by real uid/gid.
273 -W File is writable by real uid/gid.
274 -X File is executable by real uid/gid.
275 -O File is owned by real uid.
276
277 -e File exists.
8e7e0aa8
MJD
278 -z File has zero size (is empty).
279 -s File has nonzero size (returns size in bytes).
a0d0e21e
LW
280
281 -f File is a plain file.
282 -d File is a directory.
283 -l File is a symbolic link.
9c4d0f16 284 -p File is a named pipe (FIFO), or Filehandle is a pipe.
a0d0e21e
LW
285 -S File is a socket.
286 -b File is a block special file.
287 -c File is a character special file.
288 -t Filehandle is opened to a tty.
289
290 -u File has setuid bit set.
291 -g File has setgid bit set.
292 -k File has sticky bit set.
293
121910a4 294 -T File is an ASCII text file (heuristic guess).
2cdbc966 295 -B File is a "binary" file (opposite of -T).
a0d0e21e
LW
296
297 -M Age of file in days when script started.
298 -A Same for access time.
299 -C Same for inode change time.
300
a0d0e21e
LW
301Example:
302
303 while (<>) {
5b3eff12 304 chomp;
a0d0e21e 305 next unless -f $_; # ignore specials
5a964f20 306 #...
a0d0e21e
LW
307 }
308
5ff3f7a4
GS
309The interpretation of the file permission operators C<-r>, C<-R>,
310C<-w>, C<-W>, C<-x>, and C<-X> is by default based solely on the mode
311of the file and the uids and gids of the user. There may be other
312reasons you can't actually read, write, or execute the file. Such
313reasons may be for example network filesystem access controls, ACLs
314(access control lists), read-only filesystems, and unrecognized
315executable formats.
316
2b5ab1e7
TC
317Also note that, for the superuser on the local filesystems, the C<-r>,
318C<-R>, C<-w>, and C<-W> tests always return 1, and C<-x> and C<-X> return 1
5ff3f7a4
GS
319if any execute bit is set in the mode. Scripts run by the superuser
320may thus need to do a stat() to determine the actual mode of the file,
2b5ab1e7 321or temporarily set their effective uid to something else.
5ff3f7a4
GS
322
323If you are using ACLs, there is a pragma called C<filetest> that may
324produce more accurate results than the bare stat() mode bits.
5ff3f7a4
GS
325When under the C<use filetest 'access'> the above-mentioned filetests
326will test whether the permission can (not) be granted using the
468541a8 327access() family of system calls. Also note that the C<-x> and C<-X> may
5ff3f7a4
GS
328under this pragma return true even if there are no execute permission
329bits set (nor any extra execute permission ACLs). This strangeness is
330due to the underlying system calls' definitions. Read the
331documentation for the C<filetest> pragma for more information.
332
a0d0e21e
LW
333Note that C<-s/a/b/> does not do a negated substitution. Saying
334C<-exp($foo)> still works as expected, however--only single letters
335following a minus are interpreted as file tests.
336
337The C<-T> and C<-B> switches work as follows. The first block or so of the
338file is examined for odd characters such as strange control codes or
61eff3bc 339characters with the high bit set. If too many strange characters (>30%)
a0d0e21e
LW
340are found, it's a C<-B> file, otherwise it's a C<-T> file. Also, any file
341containing null in the first block is considered a binary file. If C<-T>
9124316e 342or C<-B> is used on a filehandle, the current IO buffer is examined
19799a22 343rather than the first block. Both C<-T> and C<-B> return true on a null
54310121 344file, or a file at EOF when testing a filehandle. Because you have to
4633a7c4
LW
345read a file to do the C<-T> test, on most occasions you want to use a C<-f>
346against the file first, as in C<next unless -f $file && -T $file>.
a0d0e21e 347
19799a22 348If any of the file tests (or either the C<stat> or C<lstat> operators) are given
28757baa 349the special filehandle consisting of a solitary underline, then the stat
a0d0e21e
LW
350structure of the previous file test (or stat operator) is used, saving
351a system call. (This doesn't work with C<-t>, and you need to remember
352that lstat() and C<-l> will leave values in the stat structure for the
353symbolic link, not the real file.) Example:
354
355 print "Can do.\n" if -r $a || -w _ || -x _;
356
357 stat($filename);
358 print "Readable\n" if -r _;
359 print "Writable\n" if -w _;
360 print "Executable\n" if -x _;
361 print "Setuid\n" if -u _;
362 print "Setgid\n" if -g _;
363 print "Sticky\n" if -k _;
364 print "Text\n" if -T _;
365 print "Binary\n" if -B _;
366
367=item abs VALUE
368
54310121 369=item abs
bbce6d69 370
a0d0e21e 371Returns the absolute value of its argument.
7660c0ab 372If VALUE is omitted, uses C<$_>.
a0d0e21e
LW
373
374=item accept NEWSOCKET,GENERICSOCKET
375
f86cebdf 376Accepts an incoming socket connect, just as the accept(2) system call
19799a22 377does. Returns the packed address if it succeeded, false otherwise.
2b5ab1e7 378See the example in L<perlipc/"Sockets: Client/Server Communication">.
a0d0e21e 379
8d2a6795
GS
380On systems that support a close-on-exec flag on files, the flag will
381be set for the newly opened file descriptor, as determined by the
382value of $^F. See L<perlvar/$^F>.
383
a0d0e21e
LW
384=item alarm SECONDS
385
54310121 386=item alarm
bbce6d69 387
a0d0e21e 388Arranges to have a SIGALRM delivered to this process after the
bbce6d69 389specified number of seconds have elapsed. If SECONDS is not specified,
7660c0ab 390the value stored in C<$_> is used. (On some machines,
a0d0e21e
LW
391unfortunately, the elapsed time may be up to one second less than you
392specified because of how seconds are counted.) Only one timer may be
393counting at once. Each call disables the previous timer, and an
7660c0ab 394argument of C<0> may be supplied to cancel the previous timer without
a0d0e21e
LW
395starting a new one. The returned value is the amount of time remaining
396on the previous timer.
397
4633a7c4 398For delays of finer granularity than one second, you may use Perl's
19799a22
GS
399four-argument version of select() leaving the first three arguments
400undefined, or you might be able to use the C<syscall> interface to
83df6a1d
JH
401access setitimer(2) if your system supports it. The Time::HiRes
402module (from CPAN, and starting from Perl 5.8 part of the standard
403distribution) may also prove useful.
2b5ab1e7 404
68f8bed4
JH
405It is usually a mistake to intermix C<alarm> and C<sleep> calls.
406(C<sleep> may be internally implemented in your system with C<alarm>)
a0d0e21e 407
19799a22
GS
408If you want to use C<alarm> to time out a system call you need to use an
409C<eval>/C<die> pair. You can't rely on the alarm causing the system call to
f86cebdf 410fail with C<$!> set to C<EINTR> because Perl sets up signal handlers to
19799a22 411restart system calls on some systems. Using C<eval>/C<die> always works,
5a964f20 412modulo the caveats given in L<perlipc/"Signals">.
ff68c719 413
414 eval {
f86cebdf 415 local $SIG{ALRM} = sub { die "alarm\n" }; # NB: \n required
36477c24 416 alarm $timeout;
ff68c719 417 $nread = sysread SOCKET, $buffer, $size;
36477c24 418 alarm 0;
ff68c719 419 };
ff68c719 420 if ($@) {
f86cebdf 421 die unless $@ eq "alarm\n"; # propagate unexpected errors
ff68c719 422 # timed out
423 }
424 else {
425 # didn't
426 }
427
a0d0e21e
LW
428=item atan2 Y,X
429
430Returns the arctangent of Y/X in the range -PI to PI.
431
ca6e1c26 432For the tangent operation, you may use the C<Math::Trig::tan>
28757baa 433function, or use the familiar relation:
434
435 sub tan { sin($_[0]) / cos($_[0]) }
436
a0d0e21e
LW
437=item bind SOCKET,NAME
438
439Binds a network address to a socket, just as the bind system call
19799a22 440does. Returns true if it succeeded, false otherwise. NAME should be a
4633a7c4
LW
441packed address of the appropriate type for the socket. See the examples in
442L<perlipc/"Sockets: Client/Server Communication">.
a0d0e21e 443
1c1fc3ea
GS
444=item binmode FILEHANDLE, DISCIPLINE
445
a0d0e21e
LW
446=item binmode FILEHANDLE
447
16fe6d59
GS
448Arranges for FILEHANDLE to be read or written in "binary" or "text" mode
449on systems where the run-time libraries distinguish between binary and
30168b04 450text files. If FILEHANDLE is an expression, the value is taken as the
ed53a2bb
JH
451name of the filehandle. DISCIPLINE can be either of C<:raw> for
452binary mode or C<:crlf> for "text" mode. If the DISCIPLINE is
453omitted, it defaults to C<:raw>. Returns true on success, C<undef> on
454failure. The C<:raw> are C<:clrf>, and any other directives of the
455form C<:...>, are called I/O I<disciplines>.
30168b04 456
ed53a2bb
JH
457The C<open> pragma can be used to establish default I/O disciplines.
458See L<open>.
459
460In general, binmode() should be called after open() but before any I/O
461is done on the filehandle. Calling binmode() will flush any possibly
462pending buffered input or output data on the handle. The only
463exception to this is the C<:encoding> discipline that changes
464the default character encoding of the handle, see L<open>.
465The C<:encoding> discipline sometimes needs to be called in
466mid-stream, and it doesn't flush the stream.
16fe6d59 467
16fe6d59
GS
468On some systems binmode() is necessary when you're not working with a
469text file. For the sake of portability it is a good idea to always use
470it when appropriate, and to never use it when it isn't appropriate.
30168b04
GS
471
472In other words: Regardless of platform, use binmode() on binary
473files, and do not use binmode() on text files.
19799a22
GS
474
475The operating system, device drivers, C libraries, and Perl run-time
30168b04
GS
476system all work together to let the programmer treat a single
477character (C<\n>) as the line terminator, irrespective of the external
478representation. On many operating systems, the native text file
479representation matches the internal representation, but on some
480platforms the external representation of C<\n> is made up of more than
481one character.
482
68bd7414
NIS
483Mac OS, all variants of Unix, and Stream_LF files on VMS use a single
484character to end each line in the external representation of text (even
5e12dbfa 485though that single character is CARRIAGE RETURN on Mac OS and LINE FEED
68bd7414
NIS
486on Unix and most VMS files). Consequently binmode() has no effect on
487these operating systems. In other systems like OS/2, DOS and the various
488flavors of MS-Windows your program sees a C<\n> as a simple C<\cJ>, but
489what's stored in text files are the two characters C<\cM\cJ>. That means
490that, if you don't use binmode() on these systems, C<\cM\cJ> sequences on
491disk will be converted to C<\n> on input, and any C<\n> in your program
5e12dbfa
PP
492will be converted back to C<\cM\cJ> on output. This is what you want for
493text files, but it can be disastrous for binary files.
30168b04
GS
494
495Another consequence of using binmode() (on some systems) is that
496special end-of-file markers will be seen as part of the data stream.
497For systems from the Microsoft family this means that if your binary
4375e838 498data contains C<\cZ>, the I/O subsystem will regard it as the end of
30168b04
GS
499the file, unless you use binmode().
500
501binmode() is not only important for readline() and print() operations,
502but also when using read(), seek(), sysread(), syswrite() and tell()
503(see L<perlport> for more details). See the C<$/> and C<$\> variables
504in L<perlvar> for how to manually set your input and output
505line-termination sequences.
a0d0e21e 506
4633a7c4 507=item bless REF,CLASSNAME
a0d0e21e
LW
508
509=item bless REF
510
2b5ab1e7
TC
511This function tells the thingy referenced by REF that it is now an object
512in the CLASSNAME package. If CLASSNAME is omitted, the current package
19799a22 513is used. Because a C<bless> is often the last thing in a constructor,
2b5ab1e7
TC
514it returns the reference for convenience. Always use the two-argument
515version if the function doing the blessing might be inherited by a
516derived class. See L<perltoot> and L<perlobj> for more about the blessing
517(and blessings) of objects.
a0d0e21e 518
57668c4d 519Consider always blessing objects in CLASSNAMEs that are mixed case.
2b5ab1e7
TC
520Namespaces with all lowercase names are considered reserved for
521Perl pragmata. Builtin types have all uppercase names, so to prevent
522confusion, you may wish to avoid such package names as well. Make sure
523that CLASSNAME is a true value.
60ad88b8
GS
524
525See L<perlmod/"Perl Modules">.
526
a0d0e21e
LW
527=item caller EXPR
528
529=item caller
530
5a964f20 531Returns the context of the current subroutine call. In scalar context,
28757baa 532returns the caller's package name if there is a caller, that is, if
19799a22 533we're in a subroutine or C<eval> or C<require>, and the undefined value
5a964f20 534otherwise. In list context, returns
a0d0e21e 535
748a9306 536 ($package, $filename, $line) = caller;
a0d0e21e
LW
537
538With EXPR, it returns some extra information that the debugger uses to
539print a stack trace. The value of EXPR indicates how many call frames
540to go back before the current one.
541
f3aa04c2 542 ($package, $filename, $line, $subroutine, $hasargs,
e476b1b5 543 $wantarray, $evaltext, $is_require, $hints, $bitmask) = caller($i);
e7ea3e70 544
951ba7fe 545Here $subroutine may be C<(eval)> if the frame is not a subroutine
19799a22 546call, but an C<eval>. In such a case additional elements $evaltext and
7660c0ab 547C<$is_require> are set: C<$is_require> is true if the frame is created by a
19799a22 548C<require> or C<use> statement, $evaltext contains the text of the
277ddfaf 549C<eval EXPR> statement. In particular, for an C<eval BLOCK> statement,
951ba7fe 550$filename is C<(eval)>, but $evaltext is undefined. (Note also that
dc848c6f 551each C<use> statement creates a C<require> frame inside an C<eval EXPR>)
277ddfaf 552frame. C<$hasargs> is true if a new instance of C<@_> was set up for the
e476b1b5
GS
553frame. C<$hints> and C<$bitmask> contain pragmatic hints that the caller
554was compiled with. The C<$hints> and C<$bitmask> values are subject to
555change between versions of Perl, and are not meant for external use.
748a9306
LW
556
557Furthermore, when called from within the DB package, caller returns more
7660c0ab 558detailed information: it sets the list variable C<@DB::args> to be the
54310121 559arguments with which the subroutine was invoked.
748a9306 560
7660c0ab 561Be aware that the optimizer might have optimized call frames away before
19799a22 562C<caller> had a chance to get the information. That means that C<caller(N)>
7660c0ab 563might not return information about the call frame you expect it do, for
b76cc8ba 564C<< N > 1 >>. In particular, C<@DB::args> might have information from the
19799a22 565previous time C<caller> was called.
7660c0ab 566
a0d0e21e
LW
567=item chdir EXPR
568
ffce7b87 569Changes the working directory to EXPR, if possible. If EXPR is omitted,
0bfc1ec4 570changes to the directory specified by C<$ENV{HOME}>, if set; if not,
ffce7b87 571changes to the directory specified by C<$ENV{LOGDIR}>. (Under VMS, the
b4ad75f0
AMS
572variable C<$ENV{SYS$LOGIN}> is also checked, and used if it is set.) If
573neither is set, C<chdir> does nothing. It returns true upon success,
574false otherwise. See the example under C<die>.
a0d0e21e
LW
575
576=item chmod LIST
577
578Changes the permissions of a list of files. The first element of the
4633a7c4 579list must be the numerical mode, which should probably be an octal
2f9daede
TP
580number, and which definitely should I<not> a string of octal digits:
581C<0644> is okay, C<'0644'> is not. Returns the number of files
dc848c6f 582successfully changed. See also L</oct>, if all you have is a string.
a0d0e21e
LW
583
584 $cnt = chmod 0755, 'foo', 'bar';
585 chmod 0755, @executables;
f86cebdf
GS
586 $mode = '0644'; chmod $mode, 'foo'; # !!! sets mode to
587 # --w----r-T
2f9daede
TP
588 $mode = '0644'; chmod oct($mode), 'foo'; # this is better
589 $mode = 0644; chmod $mode, 'foo'; # this is best
a0d0e21e 590
ca6e1c26
JH
591You can also import the symbolic C<S_I*> constants from the Fcntl
592module:
593
594 use Fcntl ':mode';
595
596 chmod S_IRWXU|S_IRGRP|S_IXGRP|S_IROTH|S_IXOTH, @executables;
597 # This is identical to the chmod 0755 of the above example.
598
a0d0e21e
LW
599=item chomp VARIABLE
600
313c9f5c 601=item chomp( LIST )
a0d0e21e
LW
602
603=item chomp
604
2b5ab1e7
TC
605This safer version of L</chop> removes any trailing string
606that corresponds to the current value of C<$/> (also known as
28757baa 607$INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR in the C<English> module). It returns the total
608number of characters removed from all its arguments. It's often used to
609remove the newline from the end of an input record when you're worried
2b5ab1e7
TC
610that the final record may be missing its newline. When in paragraph
611mode (C<$/ = "">), it removes all trailing newlines from the string.
4c5a6083
GS
612When in slurp mode (C<$/ = undef>) or fixed-length record mode (C<$/> is
613a reference to an integer or the like, see L<perlvar>) chomp() won't
b76cc8ba 614remove anything.
19799a22 615If VARIABLE is omitted, it chomps C<$_>. Example:
a0d0e21e
LW
616
617 while (<>) {
618 chomp; # avoid \n on last field
619 @array = split(/:/);
5a964f20 620 # ...
a0d0e21e
LW
621 }
622
4bf21a6d
RD
623If VARIABLE is a hash, it chomps the hash's values, but not its keys.
624
a0d0e21e
LW
625You can actually chomp anything that's an lvalue, including an assignment:
626
627 chomp($cwd = `pwd`);
628 chomp($answer = <STDIN>);
629
630If you chomp a list, each element is chomped, and the total number of
631characters removed is returned.
632
633=item chop VARIABLE
634
313c9f5c 635=item chop( LIST )
a0d0e21e
LW
636
637=item chop
638
639Chops off the last character of a string and returns the character
5b3eff12 640chopped. It is much more efficient than C<s/.$//s> because it neither
7660c0ab 641scans nor copies the string. If VARIABLE is omitted, chops C<$_>.
4bf21a6d
RD
642If VARIABLE is a hash, it chops the hash's values, but not its keys.
643
5b3eff12 644You can actually chop anything that's an lvalue, including an assignment.
a0d0e21e
LW
645
646If you chop a list, each element is chopped. Only the value of the
19799a22 647last C<chop> is returned.
a0d0e21e 648
19799a22 649Note that C<chop> returns the last character. To return all but the last
748a9306
LW
650character, use C<substr($string, 0, -1)>.
651
a0d0e21e
LW
652=item chown LIST
653
654Changes the owner (and group) of a list of files. The first two
19799a22
GS
655elements of the list must be the I<numeric> uid and gid, in that
656order. A value of -1 in either position is interpreted by most
657systems to leave that value unchanged. Returns the number of files
658successfully changed.
a0d0e21e
LW
659
660 $cnt = chown $uid, $gid, 'foo', 'bar';
661 chown $uid, $gid, @filenames;
662
54310121 663Here's an example that looks up nonnumeric uids in the passwd file:
a0d0e21e
LW
664
665 print "User: ";
19799a22 666 chomp($user = <STDIN>);
5a964f20 667 print "Files: ";
19799a22 668 chomp($pattern = <STDIN>);
a0d0e21e
LW
669
670 ($login,$pass,$uid,$gid) = getpwnam($user)
671 or die "$user not in passwd file";
672
5a964f20 673 @ary = glob($pattern); # expand filenames
a0d0e21e
LW
674 chown $uid, $gid, @ary;
675
54310121 676On most systems, you are not allowed to change the ownership of the
4633a7c4
LW
677file unless you're the superuser, although you should be able to change
678the group to any of your secondary groups. On insecure systems, these
679restrictions may be relaxed, but this is not a portable assumption.
19799a22
GS
680On POSIX systems, you can detect this condition this way:
681
682 use POSIX qw(sysconf _PC_CHOWN_RESTRICTED);
683 $can_chown_giveaway = not sysconf(_PC_CHOWN_RESTRICTED);
4633a7c4 684
a0d0e21e
LW
685=item chr NUMBER
686
54310121 687=item chr
bbce6d69 688
a0d0e21e 689Returns the character represented by that NUMBER in the character set.
a0ed51b3 690For example, C<chr(65)> is C<"A"> in either ASCII or Unicode, and
121910a4
JH
691chr(0x263a) is a Unicode smiley face. Note that characters from 127
692to 255 (inclusive) are by default not encoded in Unicode for backward
693compatibility reasons (but see L<encoding>).
aaa68c4a 694
b76cc8ba 695For the reverse, use L</ord>.
121910a4 696See L<perlunicode> and L<encoding> for more about Unicode.
a0d0e21e 697
7660c0ab 698If NUMBER is omitted, uses C<$_>.
bbce6d69 699
a0d0e21e
LW
700=item chroot FILENAME
701
54310121 702=item chroot
bbce6d69 703
5a964f20 704This function works like the system call by the same name: it makes the
4633a7c4 705named directory the new root directory for all further pathnames that
951ba7fe 706begin with a C</> by your process and all its children. (It doesn't
28757baa 707change your current working directory, which is unaffected.) For security
4633a7c4 708reasons, this call is restricted to the superuser. If FILENAME is
19799a22 709omitted, does a C<chroot> to C<$_>.
a0d0e21e
LW
710
711=item close FILEHANDLE
712
6a518fbc
TP
713=item close
714
9124316e
JH
715Closes the file or pipe associated with the file handle, returning
716true only if IO buffers are successfully flushed and closes the system
717file descriptor. Closes the currently selected filehandle if the
718argument is omitted.
fb73857a 719
720You don't have to close FILEHANDLE if you are immediately going to do
19799a22
GS
721another C<open> on it, because C<open> will close it for you. (See
722C<open>.) However, an explicit C<close> on an input file resets the line
723counter (C<$.>), while the implicit close done by C<open> does not.
fb73857a 724
19799a22
GS
725If the file handle came from a piped open C<close> will additionally
726return false if one of the other system calls involved fails or if the
fb73857a 727program exits with non-zero status. (If the only problem was that the
b76cc8ba 728program exited non-zero C<$!> will be set to C<0>.) Closing a pipe
2b5ab1e7 729also waits for the process executing on the pipe to complete, in case you
b76cc8ba 730want to look at the output of the pipe afterwards, and
2b5ab1e7 731implicitly puts the exit status value of that command into C<$?>.
5a964f20 732
73689b13
GS
733Prematurely closing the read end of a pipe (i.e. before the process
734writing to it at the other end has closed it) will result in a
735SIGPIPE being delivered to the writer. If the other end can't
736handle that, be sure to read all the data before closing the pipe.
737
fb73857a 738Example:
a0d0e21e 739
fb73857a 740 open(OUTPUT, '|sort >foo') # pipe to sort
741 or die "Can't start sort: $!";
5a964f20 742 #... # print stuff to output
fb73857a 743 close OUTPUT # wait for sort to finish
744 or warn $! ? "Error closing sort pipe: $!"
745 : "Exit status $? from sort";
746 open(INPUT, 'foo') # get sort's results
747 or die "Can't open 'foo' for input: $!";
a0d0e21e 748
5a964f20
TC
749FILEHANDLE may be an expression whose value can be used as an indirect
750filehandle, usually the real filehandle name.
a0d0e21e
LW
751
752=item closedir DIRHANDLE
753
19799a22 754Closes a directory opened by C<opendir> and returns the success of that
5a964f20
TC
755system call.
756
757DIRHANDLE may be an expression whose value can be used as an indirect
758dirhandle, usually the real dirhandle name.
a0d0e21e
LW
759
760=item connect SOCKET,NAME
761
762Attempts to connect to a remote socket, just as the connect system call
19799a22 763does. Returns true if it succeeded, false otherwise. NAME should be a
4633a7c4
LW
764packed address of the appropriate type for the socket. See the examples in
765L<perlipc/"Sockets: Client/Server Communication">.
a0d0e21e 766
cb1a09d0
AD
767=item continue BLOCK
768
769Actually a flow control statement rather than a function. If there is a
98293880
JH
770C<continue> BLOCK attached to a BLOCK (typically in a C<while> or
771C<foreach>), it is always executed just before the conditional is about to
772be evaluated again, just like the third part of a C<for> loop in C. Thus
cb1a09d0
AD
773it can be used to increment a loop variable, even when the loop has been
774continued via the C<next> statement (which is similar to the C C<continue>
775statement).
776
98293880 777C<last>, C<next>, or C<redo> may appear within a C<continue>
19799a22
GS
778block. C<last> and C<redo> will behave as if they had been executed within
779the main block. So will C<next>, but since it will execute a C<continue>
1d2dff63
GS
780block, it may be more entertaining.
781
782 while (EXPR) {
783 ### redo always comes here
784 do_something;
785 } continue {
786 ### next always comes here
787 do_something_else;
788 # then back the top to re-check EXPR
789 }
790 ### last always comes here
791
792Omitting the C<continue> section is semantically equivalent to using an
19799a22 793empty one, logically enough. In that case, C<next> goes directly back
1d2dff63
GS
794to check the condition at the top of the loop.
795
a0d0e21e
LW
796=item cos EXPR
797
d6217f1e
GS
798=item cos
799
5a964f20 800Returns the cosine of EXPR (expressed in radians). If EXPR is omitted,
7660c0ab 801takes cosine of C<$_>.
a0d0e21e 802
ca6e1c26 803For the inverse cosine operation, you may use the C<Math::Trig::acos()>
28757baa 804function, or use this relation:
805
806 sub acos { atan2( sqrt(1 - $_[0] * $_[0]), $_[0] ) }
807
a0d0e21e
LW
808=item crypt PLAINTEXT,SALT
809
f86cebdf 810Encrypts a string exactly like the crypt(3) function in the C library
4633a7c4
LW
811(assuming that you actually have a version there that has not been
812extirpated as a potential munition). This can prove useful for checking
813the password file for lousy passwords, amongst other things. Only the
814guys wearing white hats should do this.
a0d0e21e 815
85c16d83
JH
816Note that C<crypt> is intended to be a one-way function, much like
817breaking eggs to make an omelette. There is no (known) corresponding
818decrypt function (in other words, the crypt() is a one-way hash
819function). As a result, this function isn't all that useful for
11155c91 820cryptography. (For that, see your nearby CPAN mirror.)
2f9daede 821
85c16d83
JH
822When verifying an existing encrypted string you should use the
823encrypted text as the salt (like C<crypt($plain, $crypted) eq
824$crypted>). This allows your code to work with the standard C<crypt>
825and with more exotic implementations. In other words, do not assume
826anything about the returned string itself, or how many bytes in
827the encrypted string matter.
828
829Traditionally the result is a string of 13 bytes: two first bytes of
830the salt, followed by 11 bytes from the set C<[./0-9A-Za-z]>, and only
831the first eight bytes of the encrypted string mattered, but
832alternative hashing schemes (like MD5), higher level security schemes
833(like C2), and implementations on non-UNIX platforms may produce
834different strings.
835
836When choosing a new salt create a random two character string whose
837characters come from the set C<[./0-9A-Za-z]> (like C<join '', ('.',
838'/', 0..9, 'A'..'Z', 'a'..'z')[rand 64, rand 64]>).
e71965be 839
a0d0e21e
LW
840Here's an example that makes sure that whoever runs this program knows
841their own password:
842
843 $pwd = (getpwuid($<))[1];
a0d0e21e
LW
844
845 system "stty -echo";
846 print "Password: ";
e71965be 847 chomp($word = <STDIN>);
a0d0e21e
LW
848 print "\n";
849 system "stty echo";
850
e71965be 851 if (crypt($word, $pwd) ne $pwd) {
a0d0e21e
LW
852 die "Sorry...\n";
853 } else {
854 print "ok\n";
54310121 855 }
a0d0e21e 856
9f8f0c9d 857Of course, typing in your own password to whoever asks you
748a9306 858for it is unwise.
a0d0e21e 859
19799a22
GS
860The L<crypt> function is unsuitable for encrypting large quantities
861of data, not least of all because you can't get the information
862back. Look at the F<by-module/Crypt> and F<by-module/PGP> directories
863on your favorite CPAN mirror for a slew of potentially useful
864modules.
865
d1be9408 866If using crypt() on a Unicode string (which potentially has
85c16d83
JH
867characters with codepoints above 255), Perl tries to make sense of
868the situation by using only the low eight bits of the characters when
869calling crypt().
870
aa689395 871=item dbmclose HASH
a0d0e21e 872
19799a22 873[This function has been largely superseded by the C<untie> function.]
a0d0e21e 874
aa689395 875Breaks the binding between a DBM file and a hash.
a0d0e21e 876
19799a22 877=item dbmopen HASH,DBNAME,MASK
a0d0e21e 878
19799a22 879[This function has been largely superseded by the C<tie> function.]
a0d0e21e 880
7b8d334a 881This binds a dbm(3), ndbm(3), sdbm(3), gdbm(3), or Berkeley DB file to a
19799a22
GS
882hash. HASH is the name of the hash. (Unlike normal C<open>, the first
883argument is I<not> a filehandle, even though it looks like one). DBNAME
aa689395 884is the name of the database (without the F<.dir> or F<.pag> extension if
885any). If the database does not exist, it is created with protection
19799a22
GS
886specified by MASK (as modified by the C<umask>). If your system supports
887only the older DBM functions, you may perform only one C<dbmopen> in your
aa689395 888program. In older versions of Perl, if your system had neither DBM nor
19799a22 889ndbm, calling C<dbmopen> produced a fatal error; it now falls back to
aa689395 890sdbm(3).
891
892If you don't have write access to the DBM file, you can only read hash
893variables, not set them. If you want to test whether you can write,
19799a22 894either use file tests or try setting a dummy hash entry inside an C<eval>,
aa689395 895which will trap the error.
a0d0e21e 896
19799a22
GS
897Note that functions such as C<keys> and C<values> may return huge lists
898when used on large DBM files. You may prefer to use the C<each>
a0d0e21e
LW
899function to iterate over large DBM files. Example:
900
901 # print out history file offsets
902 dbmopen(%HIST,'/usr/lib/news/history',0666);
903 while (($key,$val) = each %HIST) {
904 print $key, ' = ', unpack('L',$val), "\n";
905 }
906 dbmclose(%HIST);
907
cb1a09d0 908See also L<AnyDBM_File> for a more general description of the pros and
184e9718 909cons of the various dbm approaches, as well as L<DB_File> for a particularly
cb1a09d0 910rich implementation.
4633a7c4 911
2b5ab1e7
TC
912You can control which DBM library you use by loading that library
913before you call dbmopen():
914
915 use DB_File;
916 dbmopen(%NS_Hist, "$ENV{HOME}/.netscape/history.db")
917 or die "Can't open netscape history file: $!";
918
a0d0e21e
LW
919=item defined EXPR
920
54310121 921=item defined
bbce6d69 922
2f9daede
TP
923Returns a Boolean value telling whether EXPR has a value other than
924the undefined value C<undef>. If EXPR is not present, C<$_> will be
925checked.
926
927Many operations return C<undef> to indicate failure, end of file,
928system error, uninitialized variable, and other exceptional
929conditions. This function allows you to distinguish C<undef> from
930other values. (A simple Boolean test will not distinguish among
7660c0ab 931C<undef>, zero, the empty string, and C<"0">, which are all equally
2f9daede 932false.) Note that since C<undef> is a valid scalar, its presence
19799a22 933doesn't I<necessarily> indicate an exceptional condition: C<pop>
2f9daede
TP
934returns C<undef> when its argument is an empty array, I<or> when the
935element to return happens to be C<undef>.
936
f10b0346
GS
937You may also use C<defined(&func)> to check whether subroutine C<&func>
938has ever been defined. The return value is unaffected by any forward
847c7ebe
DD
939declarations of C<&foo>. Note that a subroutine which is not defined
940may still be callable: its package may have an C<AUTOLOAD> method that
941makes it spring into existence the first time that it is called -- see
942L<perlsub>.
f10b0346
GS
943
944Use of C<defined> on aggregates (hashes and arrays) is deprecated. It
945used to report whether memory for that aggregate has ever been
946allocated. This behavior may disappear in future versions of Perl.
947You should instead use a simple test for size:
948
949 if (@an_array) { print "has array elements\n" }
950 if (%a_hash) { print "has hash members\n" }
2f9daede
TP
951
952When used on a hash element, it tells you whether the value is defined,
dc848c6f 953not whether the key exists in the hash. Use L</exists> for the latter
2f9daede 954purpose.
a0d0e21e
LW
955
956Examples:
957
958 print if defined $switch{'D'};
959 print "$val\n" while defined($val = pop(@ary));
960 die "Can't readlink $sym: $!"
961 unless defined($value = readlink $sym);
a0d0e21e 962 sub foo { defined &$bar ? &$bar(@_) : die "No bar"; }
2f9daede 963 $debugging = 0 unless defined $debugging;
a0d0e21e 964
19799a22 965Note: Many folks tend to overuse C<defined>, and then are surprised to
7660c0ab 966discover that the number C<0> and C<""> (the zero-length string) are, in fact,
2f9daede 967defined values. For example, if you say
a5f75d66
AD
968
969 "ab" =~ /a(.*)b/;
970
7660c0ab 971The pattern match succeeds, and C<$1> is defined, despite the fact that it
a5f75d66 972matched "nothing". But it didn't really match nothing--rather, it
2b5ab1e7 973matched something that happened to be zero characters long. This is all
a5f75d66 974very above-board and honest. When a function returns an undefined value,
2f9daede 975it's an admission that it couldn't give you an honest answer. So you
19799a22 976should use C<defined> only when you're questioning the integrity of what
7660c0ab 977you're trying to do. At other times, a simple comparison to C<0> or C<""> is
2f9daede
TP
978what you want.
979
dc848c6f 980See also L</undef>, L</exists>, L</ref>.
2f9daede 981
a0d0e21e
LW
982=item delete EXPR
983
01020589
GS
984Given an expression that specifies a hash element, array element, hash slice,
985or array slice, deletes the specified element(s) from the hash or array.
8216c1fd 986In the case of an array, if the array elements happen to be at the end,
b76cc8ba 987the size of the array will shrink to the highest element that tests
8216c1fd 988true for exists() (or 0 if no such element exists).
a0d0e21e 989
01020589
GS
990Returns each element so deleted or the undefined value if there was no such
991element. Deleting from C<$ENV{}> modifies the environment. Deleting from
992a hash tied to a DBM file deletes the entry from the DBM file. Deleting
993from a C<tie>d hash or array may not necessarily return anything.
994
8ea97a1e
GS
995Deleting an array element effectively returns that position of the array
996to its initial, uninitialized state. Subsequently testing for the same
8216c1fd
GS
997element with exists() will return false. Note that deleting array
998elements in the middle of an array will not shift the index of the ones
999after them down--use splice() for that. See L</exists>.
8ea97a1e 1000
01020589 1001The following (inefficiently) deletes all the values of %HASH and @ARRAY:
a0d0e21e 1002
5f05dabc 1003 foreach $key (keys %HASH) {
1004 delete $HASH{$key};
a0d0e21e
LW
1005 }
1006
01020589
GS
1007 foreach $index (0 .. $#ARRAY) {
1008 delete $ARRAY[$index];
1009 }
1010
1011And so do these:
5f05dabc 1012
01020589
GS
1013 delete @HASH{keys %HASH};
1014
9740c838 1015 delete @ARRAY[0 .. $#ARRAY];
5f05dabc 1016
2b5ab1e7 1017But both of these are slower than just assigning the empty list
01020589
GS
1018or undefining %HASH or @ARRAY:
1019
1020 %HASH = (); # completely empty %HASH
1021 undef %HASH; # forget %HASH ever existed
2b5ab1e7 1022
01020589
GS
1023 @ARRAY = (); # completely empty @ARRAY
1024 undef @ARRAY; # forget @ARRAY ever existed
2b5ab1e7
TC
1025
1026Note that the EXPR can be arbitrarily complicated as long as the final
01020589
GS
1027operation is a hash element, array element, hash slice, or array slice
1028lookup:
a0d0e21e
LW
1029
1030 delete $ref->[$x][$y]{$key};
5f05dabc 1031 delete @{$ref->[$x][$y]}{$key1, $key2, @morekeys};
a0d0e21e 1032
01020589
GS
1033 delete $ref->[$x][$y][$index];
1034 delete @{$ref->[$x][$y]}[$index1, $index2, @moreindices];
1035
a0d0e21e
LW
1036=item die LIST
1037
19799a22
GS
1038Outside an C<eval>, prints the value of LIST to C<STDERR> and
1039exits with the current value of C<$!> (errno). If C<$!> is C<0>,
61eff3bc
JH
1040exits with the value of C<<< ($? >> 8) >>> (backtick `command`
1041status). If C<<< ($? >> 8) >>> is C<0>, exits with C<255>. Inside
19799a22
GS
1042an C<eval(),> the error message is stuffed into C<$@> and the
1043C<eval> is terminated with the undefined value. This makes
1044C<die> the way to raise an exception.
a0d0e21e
LW
1045
1046Equivalent examples:
1047
1048 die "Can't cd to spool: $!\n" unless chdir '/usr/spool/news';
54310121 1049 chdir '/usr/spool/news' or die "Can't cd to spool: $!\n"
a0d0e21e
LW
1050
1051If the value of EXPR does not end in a newline, the current script line
1052number and input line number (if any) are also printed, and a newline
883faa13
GS
1053is supplied. Note that the "input line number" (also known as "chunk")
1054is subject to whatever notion of "line" happens to be currently in
1055effect, and is also available as the special variable C<$.>.
1056See L<perlvar/"$/"> and L<perlvar/"$.">.
1057
1058Hint: sometimes appending C<", stopped"> to your message
7660c0ab 1059will cause it to make better sense when the string C<"at foo line 123"> is
a0d0e21e
LW
1060appended. Suppose you are running script "canasta".
1061
1062 die "/etc/games is no good";
1063 die "/etc/games is no good, stopped";
1064
1065produce, respectively
1066
1067 /etc/games is no good at canasta line 123.
1068 /etc/games is no good, stopped at canasta line 123.
1069
2b5ab1e7 1070See also exit(), warn(), and the Carp module.
a0d0e21e 1071
7660c0ab
A
1072If LIST is empty and C<$@> already contains a value (typically from a
1073previous eval) that value is reused after appending C<"\t...propagated">.
fb73857a 1074This is useful for propagating exceptions:
1075
1076 eval { ... };
1077 die unless $@ =~ /Expected exception/;
1078
ad216e65
JH
1079If LIST is empty and C<$@> contains an object reference that has a
1080C<PROPAGATE> method, that method will be called with additional file
1081and line number parameters. The return value replaces the value in
1082C<$@>. ie. as if C<<$@ = eval { $@->PROPAGATE(__FILE__, __LINE__) };>>
1083were called.
1084
7660c0ab 1085If C<$@> is empty then the string C<"Died"> is used.
fb73857a 1086
52531d10
GS
1087die() can also be called with a reference argument. If this happens to be
1088trapped within an eval(), $@ contains the reference. This behavior permits
1089a more elaborate exception handling implementation using objects that
4375e838 1090maintain arbitrary state about the nature of the exception. Such a scheme
52531d10
GS
1091is sometimes preferable to matching particular string values of $@ using
1092regular expressions. Here's an example:
1093
1094 eval { ... ; die Some::Module::Exception->new( FOO => "bar" ) };
1095 if ($@) {
1096 if (ref($@) && UNIVERSAL::isa($@,"Some::Module::Exception")) {
1097 # handle Some::Module::Exception
1098 }
1099 else {
1100 # handle all other possible exceptions
1101 }
1102 }
1103
19799a22 1104Because perl will stringify uncaught exception messages before displaying
52531d10
GS
1105them, you may want to overload stringification operations on such custom
1106exception objects. See L<overload> for details about that.
1107
19799a22
GS
1108You can arrange for a callback to be run just before the C<die>
1109does its deed, by setting the C<$SIG{__DIE__}> hook. The associated
1110handler will be called with the error text and can change the error
1111message, if it sees fit, by calling C<die> again. See
1112L<perlvar/$SIG{expr}> for details on setting C<%SIG> entries, and
1113L<"eval BLOCK"> for some examples. Although this feature was meant
1114to be run only right before your program was to exit, this is not
1115currently the case--the C<$SIG{__DIE__}> hook is currently called
1116even inside eval()ed blocks/strings! If one wants the hook to do
1117nothing in such situations, put
fb73857a 1118
1119 die @_ if $^S;
1120
19799a22
GS
1121as the first line of the handler (see L<perlvar/$^S>). Because
1122this promotes strange action at a distance, this counterintuitive
b76cc8ba 1123behavior may be fixed in a future release.
774d564b 1124
a0d0e21e
LW
1125=item do BLOCK
1126
1127Not really a function. Returns the value of the last command in the
1128sequence of commands indicated by BLOCK. When modified by a loop
98293880
JH
1129modifier, executes the BLOCK once before testing the loop condition.
1130(On other statements the loop modifiers test the conditional first.)
a0d0e21e 1131
4968c1e4 1132C<do BLOCK> does I<not> count as a loop, so the loop control statements
2b5ab1e7
TC
1133C<next>, C<last>, or C<redo> cannot be used to leave or restart the block.
1134See L<perlsyn> for alternative strategies.
4968c1e4 1135
a0d0e21e
LW
1136=item do SUBROUTINE(LIST)
1137
1138A deprecated form of subroutine call. See L<perlsub>.
1139
1140=item do EXPR
1141
1142Uses the value of EXPR as a filename and executes the contents of the
1143file as a Perl script. Its primary use is to include subroutines
1144from a Perl subroutine library.
1145
1146 do 'stat.pl';
1147
1148is just like
1149
986b19de 1150 eval `cat stat.pl`;
a0d0e21e 1151
2b5ab1e7
TC
1152except that it's more efficient and concise, keeps track of the current
1153filename for error messages, searches the @INC libraries, and updates
1154C<%INC> if the file is found. See L<perlvar/Predefined Names> for these
1155variables. It also differs in that code evaluated with C<do FILENAME>
1156cannot see lexicals in the enclosing scope; C<eval STRING> does. It's the
1157same, however, in that it does reparse the file every time you call it,
1158so you probably don't want to do this inside a loop.
a0d0e21e 1159
8e30cc93 1160If C<do> cannot read the file, it returns undef and sets C<$!> to the
2b5ab1e7 1161error. If C<do> can read the file but cannot compile it, it
8e30cc93
MG
1162returns undef and sets an error message in C<$@>. If the file is
1163successfully compiled, C<do> returns the value of the last expression
1164evaluated.
1165
a0d0e21e 1166Note that inclusion of library modules is better done with the
19799a22 1167C<use> and C<require> operators, which also do automatic error checking
4633a7c4 1168and raise an exception if there's a problem.
a0d0e21e 1169
5a964f20
TC
1170You might like to use C<do> to read in a program configuration
1171file. Manual error checking can be done this way:
1172
b76cc8ba 1173 # read in config files: system first, then user
f86cebdf 1174 for $file ("/share/prog/defaults.rc",
b76cc8ba 1175 "$ENV{HOME}/.someprogrc")
2b5ab1e7 1176 {
5a964f20 1177 unless ($return = do $file) {
f86cebdf
GS
1178 warn "couldn't parse $file: $@" if $@;
1179 warn "couldn't do $file: $!" unless defined $return;
1180 warn "couldn't run $file" unless $return;
5a964f20
TC
1181 }
1182 }
1183
a0d0e21e
LW
1184=item dump LABEL
1185
1614b0e3
JD
1186=item dump
1187
19799a22
GS
1188This function causes an immediate core dump. See also the B<-u>
1189command-line switch in L<perlrun>, which does the same thing.
1190Primarily this is so that you can use the B<undump> program (not
1191supplied) to turn your core dump into an executable binary after
1192having initialized all your variables at the beginning of the
1193program. When the new binary is executed it will begin by executing
1194a C<goto LABEL> (with all the restrictions that C<goto> suffers).
1195Think of it as a goto with an intervening core dump and reincarnation.
1196If C<LABEL> is omitted, restarts the program from the top.
1197
1198B<WARNING>: Any files opened at the time of the dump will I<not>
1199be open any more when the program is reincarnated, with possible
b76cc8ba 1200resulting confusion on the part of Perl.
19799a22
GS
1201
1202This function is now largely obsolete, partly because it's very
1203hard to convert a core file into an executable, and because the
1204real compiler backends for generating portable bytecode and compilable
1205C code have superseded it.
1206
1207If you're looking to use L<dump> to speed up your program, consider
1208generating bytecode or native C code as described in L<perlcc>. If
1209you're just trying to accelerate a CGI script, consider using the
210b36aa 1210C<mod_perl> extension to B<Apache>, or the CPAN module, CGI::Fast.
19799a22 1211You might also consider autoloading or selfloading, which at least
b76cc8ba 1212make your program I<appear> to run faster.
5a964f20 1213
aa689395 1214=item each HASH
1215
5a964f20 1216When called in list context, returns a 2-element list consisting of the
aa689395 1217key and value for the next element of a hash, so that you can iterate over
74fc8b5f 1218it. When called in scalar context, returns only the key for the next
e902a979 1219element in the hash.
2f9daede 1220
ab192400
GS
1221Entries are returned in an apparently random order. The actual random
1222order is subject to change in future versions of perl, but it is guaranteed
19799a22 1223to be in the same order as either the C<keys> or C<values> function
ab192400
GS
1224would produce on the same (unmodified) hash.
1225
1226When the hash is entirely read, a null array is returned in list context
19799a22
GS
1227(which when assigned produces a false (C<0>) value), and C<undef> in
1228scalar context. The next call to C<each> after that will start iterating
1229again. There is a single iterator for each hash, shared by all C<each>,
1230C<keys>, and C<values> function calls in the program; it can be reset by
2f9daede
TP
1231reading all the elements from the hash, or by evaluating C<keys HASH> or
1232C<values HASH>. If you add or delete elements of a hash while you're
74fc8b5f
MJD
1233iterating over it, you may get entries skipped or duplicated, so
1234don't. Exception: It is always safe to delete the item most recently
1235returned by C<each()>, which means that the following code will work:
1236
1237 while (($key, $value) = each %hash) {
1238 print $key, "\n";
1239 delete $hash{$key}; # This is safe
1240 }
aa689395 1241
f86cebdf 1242The following prints out your environment like the printenv(1) program,
aa689395 1243only in a different order:
a0d0e21e
LW
1244
1245 while (($key,$value) = each %ENV) {
1246 print "$key=$value\n";
1247 }
1248
19799a22 1249See also C<keys>, C<values> and C<sort>.
a0d0e21e
LW
1250
1251=item eof FILEHANDLE
1252
4633a7c4
LW
1253=item eof ()
1254
a0d0e21e
LW
1255=item eof
1256
1257Returns 1 if the next read on FILEHANDLE will return end of file, or if
1258FILEHANDLE is not open. FILEHANDLE may be an expression whose value
5a964f20 1259gives the real filehandle. (Note that this function actually
19799a22 1260reads a character and then C<ungetc>s it, so isn't very useful in an
748a9306 1261interactive context.) Do not read from a terminal file (or call
19799a22 1262C<eof(FILEHANDLE)> on it) after end-of-file is reached. File types such
748a9306
LW
1263as terminals may lose the end-of-file condition if you do.
1264
820475bd
GS
1265An C<eof> without an argument uses the last file read. Using C<eof()>
1266with empty parentheses is very different. It refers to the pseudo file
1267formed from the files listed on the command line and accessed via the
61eff3bc
JH
1268C<< <> >> operator. Since C<< <> >> isn't explicitly opened,
1269as a normal filehandle is, an C<eof()> before C<< <> >> has been
820475bd
GS
1270used will cause C<@ARGV> to be examined to determine if input is
1271available.
1272
61eff3bc 1273In a C<< while (<>) >> loop, C<eof> or C<eof(ARGV)> can be used to
820475bd
GS
1274detect the end of each file, C<eof()> will only detect the end of the
1275last file. Examples:
a0d0e21e 1276
748a9306
LW
1277 # reset line numbering on each input file
1278 while (<>) {
b76cc8ba 1279 next if /^\s*#/; # skip comments
748a9306 1280 print "$.\t$_";
5a964f20
TC
1281 } continue {
1282 close ARGV if eof; # Not eof()!
748a9306
LW
1283 }
1284
a0d0e21e
LW
1285 # insert dashes just before last line of last file
1286 while (<>) {
5a964f20 1287 if (eof()) { # check for end of current file
a0d0e21e 1288 print "--------------\n";
2b5ab1e7 1289 close(ARGV); # close or last; is needed if we
748a9306 1290 # are reading from the terminal
a0d0e21e
LW
1291 }
1292 print;
1293 }
1294
a0d0e21e 1295Practical hint: you almost never need to use C<eof> in Perl, because the
3ce0d271
GS
1296input operators typically return C<undef> when they run out of data, or if
1297there was an error.
a0d0e21e
LW
1298
1299=item eval EXPR
1300
1301=item eval BLOCK
1302
c7cc6f1c
GS
1303In the first form, the return value of EXPR is parsed and executed as if it
1304were a little Perl program. The value of the expression (which is itself
5a964f20 1305determined within scalar context) is first parsed, and if there weren't any
be3174d2
GS
1306errors, executed in the lexical context of the current Perl program, so
1307that any variable settings or subroutine and format definitions remain
1308afterwards. Note that the value is parsed every time the eval executes.
1309If EXPR is omitted, evaluates C<$_>. This form is typically used to
1310delay parsing and subsequent execution of the text of EXPR until run time.
c7cc6f1c
GS
1311
1312In the second form, the code within the BLOCK is parsed only once--at the
1313same time the code surrounding the eval itself was parsed--and executed
1314within the context of the current Perl program. This form is typically
1315used to trap exceptions more efficiently than the first (see below), while
1316also providing the benefit of checking the code within BLOCK at compile
1317time.
1318
1319The final semicolon, if any, may be omitted from the value of EXPR or within
1320the BLOCK.
1321
1322In both forms, the value returned is the value of the last expression
5a964f20 1323evaluated inside the mini-program; a return statement may be also used, just
c7cc6f1c 1324as with subroutines. The expression providing the return value is evaluated
5a964f20 1325in void, scalar, or list context, depending on the context of the eval itself.
c7cc6f1c 1326See L</wantarray> for more on how the evaluation context can be determined.
a0d0e21e 1327
19799a22
GS
1328If there is a syntax error or runtime error, or a C<die> statement is
1329executed, an undefined value is returned by C<eval>, and C<$@> is set to the
a0d0e21e 1330error message. If there was no error, C<$@> is guaranteed to be a null
19799a22 1331string. Beware that using C<eval> neither silences perl from printing
c7cc6f1c
GS
1332warnings to STDERR, nor does it stuff the text of warning messages into C<$@>.
1333To do either of those, you have to use the C<$SIG{__WARN__}> facility. See
1334L</warn> and L<perlvar>.
a0d0e21e 1335
19799a22
GS
1336Note that, because C<eval> traps otherwise-fatal errors, it is useful for
1337determining whether a particular feature (such as C<socket> or C<symlink>)
a0d0e21e
LW
1338is implemented. It is also Perl's exception trapping mechanism, where
1339the die operator is used to raise exceptions.
1340
1341If the code to be executed doesn't vary, you may use the eval-BLOCK
1342form to trap run-time errors without incurring the penalty of
1343recompiling each time. The error, if any, is still returned in C<$@>.
1344Examples:
1345
54310121 1346 # make divide-by-zero nonfatal
a0d0e21e
LW
1347 eval { $answer = $a / $b; }; warn $@ if $@;
1348
1349 # same thing, but less efficient
1350 eval '$answer = $a / $b'; warn $@ if $@;
1351
1352 # a compile-time error
5a964f20 1353 eval { $answer = }; # WRONG
a0d0e21e
LW
1354
1355 # a run-time error
1356 eval '$answer ='; # sets $@
1357
2b5ab1e7
TC
1358Due to the current arguably broken state of C<__DIE__> hooks, when using
1359the C<eval{}> form as an exception trap in libraries, you may wish not
1360to trigger any C<__DIE__> hooks that user code may have installed.
1361You can use the C<local $SIG{__DIE__}> construct for this purpose,
1362as shown in this example:
774d564b 1363
1364 # a very private exception trap for divide-by-zero
f86cebdf
GS
1365 eval { local $SIG{'__DIE__'}; $answer = $a / $b; };
1366 warn $@ if $@;
774d564b 1367
1368This is especially significant, given that C<__DIE__> hooks can call
19799a22 1369C<die> again, which has the effect of changing their error messages:
774d564b 1370
1371 # __DIE__ hooks may modify error messages
1372 {
f86cebdf
GS
1373 local $SIG{'__DIE__'} =
1374 sub { (my $x = $_[0]) =~ s/foo/bar/g; die $x };
c7cc6f1c
GS
1375 eval { die "foo lives here" };
1376 print $@ if $@; # prints "bar lives here"
774d564b 1377 }
1378
19799a22 1379Because this promotes action at a distance, this counterintuitive behavior
2b5ab1e7
TC
1380may be fixed in a future release.
1381
19799a22 1382With an C<eval>, you should be especially careful to remember what's
a0d0e21e
LW
1383being looked at when:
1384
1385 eval $x; # CASE 1
1386 eval "$x"; # CASE 2
1387
1388 eval '$x'; # CASE 3
1389 eval { $x }; # CASE 4
1390
5a964f20 1391 eval "\$$x++"; # CASE 5
a0d0e21e
LW
1392 $$x++; # CASE 6
1393
2f9daede 1394Cases 1 and 2 above behave identically: they run the code contained in
19799a22 1395the variable $x. (Although case 2 has misleading double quotes making
2f9daede 1396the reader wonder what else might be happening (nothing is).) Cases 3
7660c0ab 1397and 4 likewise behave in the same way: they run the code C<'$x'>, which
19799a22 1398does nothing but return the value of $x. (Case 4 is preferred for
2f9daede
TP
1399purely visual reasons, but it also has the advantage of compiling at
1400compile-time instead of at run-time.) Case 5 is a place where
19799a22 1401normally you I<would> like to use double quotes, except that in this
2f9daede
TP
1402particular situation, you can just use symbolic references instead, as
1403in case 6.
a0d0e21e 1404
4968c1e4 1405C<eval BLOCK> does I<not> count as a loop, so the loop control statements
2b5ab1e7 1406C<next>, C<last>, or C<redo> cannot be used to leave or restart the block.
4968c1e4 1407
a0d0e21e
LW
1408=item exec LIST
1409
8bf3b016
GS
1410=item exec PROGRAM LIST
1411
19799a22
GS
1412The C<exec> function executes a system command I<and never returns>--
1413use C<system> instead of C<exec> if you want it to return. It fails and
1414returns false only if the command does not exist I<and> it is executed
fb73857a 1415directly instead of via your system's command shell (see below).
a0d0e21e 1416
19799a22
GS
1417Since it's a common mistake to use C<exec> instead of C<system>, Perl
1418warns you if there is a following statement which isn't C<die>, C<warn>,
1419or C<exit> (if C<-w> is set - but you always do that). If you
1420I<really> want to follow an C<exec> with some other statement, you
55d729e4
GS
1421can use one of these styles to avoid the warning:
1422
5a964f20
TC
1423 exec ('foo') or print STDERR "couldn't exec foo: $!";
1424 { exec ('foo') }; print STDERR "couldn't exec foo: $!";
55d729e4 1425
5a964f20 1426If there is more than one argument in LIST, or if LIST is an array
f86cebdf 1427with more than one value, calls execvp(3) with the arguments in LIST.
5a964f20
TC
1428If there is only one scalar argument or an array with one element in it,
1429the argument is checked for shell metacharacters, and if there are any,
1430the entire argument is passed to the system's command shell for parsing
1431(this is C</bin/sh -c> on Unix platforms, but varies on other platforms).
1432If there are no shell metacharacters in the argument, it is split into
b76cc8ba 1433words and passed directly to C<execvp>, which is more efficient.
19799a22 1434Examples:
a0d0e21e 1435
19799a22
GS
1436 exec '/bin/echo', 'Your arguments are: ', @ARGV;
1437 exec "sort $outfile | uniq";
a0d0e21e
LW
1438
1439If you don't really want to execute the first argument, but want to lie
1440to the program you are executing about its own name, you can specify
1441the program you actually want to run as an "indirect object" (without a
1442comma) in front of the LIST. (This always forces interpretation of the
54310121 1443LIST as a multivalued list, even if there is only a single scalar in
a0d0e21e
LW
1444the list.) Example:
1445
1446 $shell = '/bin/csh';
1447 exec $shell '-sh'; # pretend it's a login shell
1448
1449or, more directly,
1450
1451 exec {'/bin/csh'} '-sh'; # pretend it's a login shell
1452
bb32b41a
GS
1453When the arguments get executed via the system shell, results will
1454be subject to its quirks and capabilities. See L<perlop/"`STRING`">
1455for details.
1456
19799a22
GS
1457Using an indirect object with C<exec> or C<system> is also more
1458secure. This usage (which also works fine with system()) forces
1459interpretation of the arguments as a multivalued list, even if the
1460list had just one argument. That way you're safe from the shell
1461expanding wildcards or splitting up words with whitespace in them.
5a964f20
TC
1462
1463 @args = ( "echo surprise" );
1464
2b5ab1e7 1465 exec @args; # subject to shell escapes
f86cebdf 1466 # if @args == 1
2b5ab1e7 1467 exec { $args[0] } @args; # safe even with one-arg list
5a964f20
TC
1468
1469The first version, the one without the indirect object, ran the I<echo>
1470program, passing it C<"surprise"> an argument. The second version
1471didn't--it tried to run a program literally called I<"echo surprise">,
1472didn't find it, and set C<$?> to a non-zero value indicating failure.
1473
0f897271
GS
1474Beginning with v5.6.0, Perl will attempt to flush all files opened for
1475output before the exec, but this may not be supported on some platforms
1476(see L<perlport>). To be safe, you may need to set C<$|> ($AUTOFLUSH
1477in English) or call the C<autoflush()> method of C<IO::Handle> on any
1478open handles in order to avoid lost output.
1479
19799a22 1480Note that C<exec> will not call your C<END> blocks, nor will it call
7660c0ab
A
1481any C<DESTROY> methods in your objects.
1482
a0d0e21e
LW
1483=item exists EXPR
1484
01020589 1485Given an expression that specifies a hash element or array element,
8ea97a1e
GS
1486returns true if the specified element in the hash or array has ever
1487been initialized, even if the corresponding value is undefined. The
1488element is not autovivified if it doesn't exist.
a0d0e21e 1489
01020589
GS
1490 print "Exists\n" if exists $hash{$key};
1491 print "Defined\n" if defined $hash{$key};
1492 print "True\n" if $hash{$key};
1493
1494 print "Exists\n" if exists $array[$index];
1495 print "Defined\n" if defined $array[$index];
1496 print "True\n" if $array[$index];
a0d0e21e 1497
8ea97a1e 1498A hash or array element can be true only if it's defined, and defined if
a0d0e21e
LW
1499it exists, but the reverse doesn't necessarily hold true.
1500
afebc493
GS
1501Given an expression that specifies the name of a subroutine,
1502returns true if the specified subroutine has ever been declared, even
1503if it is undefined. Mentioning a subroutine name for exists or defined
847c7ebe
DD
1504does not count as declaring it. Note that a subroutine which does not
1505exist may still be callable: its package may have an C<AUTOLOAD>
1506method that makes it spring into existence the first time that it is
1507called -- see L<perlsub>.
afebc493
GS
1508
1509 print "Exists\n" if exists &subroutine;
1510 print "Defined\n" if defined &subroutine;
1511
a0d0e21e 1512Note that the EXPR can be arbitrarily complicated as long as the final
afebc493 1513operation is a hash or array key lookup or subroutine name:
a0d0e21e 1514
2b5ab1e7
TC
1515 if (exists $ref->{A}->{B}->{$key}) { }
1516 if (exists $hash{A}{B}{$key}) { }
1517
01020589
GS
1518 if (exists $ref->{A}->{B}->[$ix]) { }
1519 if (exists $hash{A}{B}[$ix]) { }
1520
afebc493
GS
1521 if (exists &{$ref->{A}{B}{$key}}) { }
1522
01020589
GS
1523Although the deepest nested array or hash will not spring into existence
1524just because its existence was tested, any intervening ones will.
61eff3bc 1525Thus C<< $ref->{"A"} >> and C<< $ref->{"A"}->{"B"} >> will spring
01020589
GS
1526into existence due to the existence test for the $key element above.
1527This happens anywhere the arrow operator is used, including even:
5a964f20 1528
2b5ab1e7
TC
1529 undef $ref;
1530 if (exists $ref->{"Some key"}) { }
1531 print $ref; # prints HASH(0x80d3d5c)
1532
1533This surprising autovivification in what does not at first--or even
1534second--glance appear to be an lvalue context may be fixed in a future
5a964f20 1535release.
a0d0e21e 1536
479ba383
GS
1537See L<perlref/"Pseudo-hashes: Using an array as a hash"> for specifics
1538on how exists() acts when used on a pseudo-hash.
e0478e5a 1539
afebc493
GS
1540Use of a subroutine call, rather than a subroutine name, as an argument
1541to exists() is an error.
1542
1543 exists &sub; # OK
1544 exists &sub(); # Error
1545
a0d0e21e
LW
1546=item exit EXPR
1547
2b5ab1e7 1548Evaluates EXPR and exits immediately with that value. Example:
a0d0e21e
LW
1549
1550 $ans = <STDIN>;
1551 exit 0 if $ans =~ /^[Xx]/;
1552
19799a22 1553See also C<die>. If EXPR is omitted, exits with C<0> status. The only
2b5ab1e7
TC
1554universally recognized values for EXPR are C<0> for success and C<1>
1555for error; other values are subject to interpretation depending on the
1556environment in which the Perl program is running. For example, exiting
155769 (EX_UNAVAILABLE) from a I<sendmail> incoming-mail filter will cause
1558the mailer to return the item undelivered, but that's not true everywhere.
a0d0e21e 1559
19799a22
GS
1560Don't use C<exit> to abort a subroutine if there's any chance that
1561someone might want to trap whatever error happened. Use C<die> instead,
1562which can be trapped by an C<eval>.
28757baa 1563
19799a22 1564The exit() function does not always exit immediately. It calls any
2b5ab1e7 1565defined C<END> routines first, but these C<END> routines may not
19799a22 1566themselves abort the exit. Likewise any object destructors that need to
2b5ab1e7
TC
1567be called are called before the real exit. If this is a problem, you
1568can call C<POSIX:_exit($status)> to avoid END and destructor processing.
87275199 1569See L<perlmod> for details.
5a964f20 1570
a0d0e21e
LW
1571=item exp EXPR
1572
54310121 1573=item exp
bbce6d69 1574
b76cc8ba 1575Returns I<e> (the natural logarithm base) to the power of EXPR.
a0d0e21e
LW
1576If EXPR is omitted, gives C<exp($_)>.
1577
1578=item fcntl FILEHANDLE,FUNCTION,SCALAR
1579
f86cebdf 1580Implements the fcntl(2) function. You'll probably have to say
a0d0e21e
LW
1581
1582 use Fcntl;
1583
0ade1984 1584first to get the correct constant definitions. Argument processing and
b76cc8ba 1585value return works just like C<ioctl> below.
a0d0e21e
LW
1586For example:
1587
1588 use Fcntl;
5a964f20
TC
1589 fcntl($filehandle, F_GETFL, $packed_return_buffer)
1590 or die "can't fcntl F_GETFL: $!";
1591
19799a22 1592You don't have to check for C<defined> on the return from C<fnctl>.
951ba7fe
GS
1593Like C<ioctl>, it maps a C<0> return from the system call into
1594C<"0 but true"> in Perl. This string is true in boolean context and C<0>
2b5ab1e7
TC
1595in numeric context. It is also exempt from the normal B<-w> warnings
1596on improper numeric conversions.
5a964f20 1597
19799a22 1598Note that C<fcntl> will produce a fatal error if used on a machine that
2b5ab1e7
TC
1599doesn't implement fcntl(2). See the Fcntl module or your fcntl(2)
1600manpage to learn what functions are available on your system.
a0d0e21e
LW
1601
1602=item fileno FILEHANDLE
1603
2b5ab1e7
TC
1604Returns the file descriptor for a filehandle, or undefined if the
1605filehandle is not open. This is mainly useful for constructing
19799a22 1606bitmaps for C<select> and low-level POSIX tty-handling operations.
2b5ab1e7
TC
1607If FILEHANDLE is an expression, the value is taken as an indirect
1608filehandle, generally its name.
5a964f20 1609
b76cc8ba 1610You can use this to find out whether two handles refer to the
5a964f20
TC
1611same underlying descriptor:
1612
1613 if (fileno(THIS) == fileno(THAT)) {
1614 print "THIS and THAT are dups\n";
b76cc8ba
NIS
1615 }
1616
1617(Filehandles connected to memory objects via new features of C<open> may
1618return undefined even though they are open.)
1619
a0d0e21e
LW
1620
1621=item flock FILEHANDLE,OPERATION
1622
19799a22
GS
1623Calls flock(2), or an emulation of it, on FILEHANDLE. Returns true
1624for success, false on failure. Produces a fatal error if used on a
2b5ab1e7 1625machine that doesn't implement flock(2), fcntl(2) locking, or lockf(3).
19799a22 1626C<flock> is Perl's portable file locking interface, although it locks
2b5ab1e7
TC
1627only entire files, not records.
1628
1629Two potentially non-obvious but traditional C<flock> semantics are
1630that it waits indefinitely until the lock is granted, and that its locks
1631B<merely advisory>. Such discretionary locks are more flexible, but offer
19799a22
GS
1632fewer guarantees. This means that files locked with C<flock> may be
1633modified by programs that do not also use C<flock>. See L<perlport>,
2b5ab1e7
TC
1634your port's specific documentation, or your system-specific local manpages
1635for details. It's best to assume traditional behavior if you're writing
1636portable programs. (But if you're not, you should as always feel perfectly
1637free to write for your own system's idiosyncrasies (sometimes called
1638"features"). Slavish adherence to portability concerns shouldn't get
1639in the way of your getting your job done.)
a3cb178b 1640
8ebc5c01 1641OPERATION is one of LOCK_SH, LOCK_EX, or LOCK_UN, possibly combined with
1642LOCK_NB. These constants are traditionally valued 1, 2, 8 and 4, but
ea3105be 1643you can use the symbolic names if you import them from the Fcntl module,
68dc0745 1644either individually, or as a group using the ':flock' tag. LOCK_SH
1645requests a shared lock, LOCK_EX requests an exclusive lock, and LOCK_UN
ea3105be
GS
1646releases a previously requested lock. If LOCK_NB is bitwise-or'ed with
1647LOCK_SH or LOCK_EX then C<flock> will return immediately rather than blocking
68dc0745 1648waiting for the lock (check the return status to see if you got it).
1649
2b5ab1e7
TC
1650To avoid the possibility of miscoordination, Perl now flushes FILEHANDLE
1651before locking or unlocking it.
8ebc5c01 1652
f86cebdf 1653Note that the emulation built with lockf(3) doesn't provide shared
8ebc5c01 1654locks, and it requires that FILEHANDLE be open with write intent. These
2b5ab1e7 1655are the semantics that lockf(3) implements. Most if not all systems
f86cebdf 1656implement lockf(3) in terms of fcntl(2) locking, though, so the
8ebc5c01 1657differing semantics shouldn't bite too many people.
1658
19799a22
GS
1659Note also that some versions of C<flock> cannot lock things over the
1660network; you would need to use the more system-specific C<fcntl> for
f86cebdf
GS
1661that. If you like you can force Perl to ignore your system's flock(2)
1662function, and so provide its own fcntl(2)-based emulation, by passing
8ebc5c01 1663the switch C<-Ud_flock> to the F<Configure> program when you configure
1664perl.
4633a7c4
LW
1665
1666Here's a mailbox appender for BSD systems.
a0d0e21e 1667
7e1af8bc 1668 use Fcntl ':flock'; # import LOCK_* constants
a0d0e21e
LW
1669
1670 sub lock {
7e1af8bc 1671 flock(MBOX,LOCK_EX);
a0d0e21e
LW
1672 # and, in case someone appended
1673 # while we were waiting...
1674 seek(MBOX, 0, 2);
1675 }
1676
1677 sub unlock {
7e1af8bc 1678 flock(MBOX,LOCK_UN);
a0d0e21e
LW
1679 }
1680
1681 open(MBOX, ">>/usr/spool/mail/$ENV{'USER'}")
1682 or die "Can't open mailbox: $!";
1683
1684 lock();
1685 print MBOX $msg,"\n\n";
1686 unlock();
1687
2b5ab1e7
TC
1688On systems that support a real flock(), locks are inherited across fork()
1689calls, whereas those that must resort to the more capricious fcntl()
1690function lose the locks, making it harder to write servers.
1691
cb1a09d0 1692See also L<DB_File> for other flock() examples.
a0d0e21e
LW
1693
1694=item fork
1695
2b5ab1e7
TC
1696Does a fork(2) system call to create a new process running the
1697same program at the same point. It returns the child pid to the
1698parent process, C<0> to the child process, or C<undef> if the fork is
1699unsuccessful. File descriptors (and sometimes locks on those descriptors)
1700are shared, while everything else is copied. On most systems supporting
1701fork(), great care has gone into making it extremely efficient (for
1702example, using copy-on-write technology on data pages), making it the
1703dominant paradigm for multitasking over the last few decades.
5a964f20 1704
0f897271
GS
1705Beginning with v5.6.0, Perl will attempt to flush all files opened for
1706output before forking the child process, but this may not be supported
1707on some platforms (see L<perlport>). To be safe, you may need to set
1708C<$|> ($AUTOFLUSH in English) or call the C<autoflush()> method of
1709C<IO::Handle> on any open handles in order to avoid duplicate output.
a0d0e21e 1710
19799a22 1711If you C<fork> without ever waiting on your children, you will
2b5ab1e7
TC
1712accumulate zombies. On some systems, you can avoid this by setting
1713C<$SIG{CHLD}> to C<"IGNORE">. See also L<perlipc> for more examples of
1714forking and reaping moribund children.
cb1a09d0 1715
28757baa 1716Note that if your forked child inherits system file descriptors like
1717STDIN and STDOUT that are actually connected by a pipe or socket, even
2b5ab1e7 1718if you exit, then the remote server (such as, say, a CGI script or a
19799a22 1719backgrounded job launched from a remote shell) won't think you're done.
2b5ab1e7 1720You should reopen those to F</dev/null> if it's any issue.
28757baa 1721
cb1a09d0
AD
1722=item format
1723
19799a22 1724Declare a picture format for use by the C<write> function. For
cb1a09d0
AD
1725example:
1726
54310121 1727 format Something =
cb1a09d0
AD
1728 Test: @<<<<<<<< @||||| @>>>>>
1729 $str, $%, '$' . int($num)
1730 .
1731
1732 $str = "widget";
184e9718 1733 $num = $cost/$quantity;
cb1a09d0
AD
1734 $~ = 'Something';
1735 write;
1736
1737See L<perlform> for many details and examples.
1738
8903cb82 1739=item formline PICTURE,LIST
a0d0e21e 1740
5a964f20 1741This is an internal function used by C<format>s, though you may call it,
a0d0e21e
LW
1742too. It formats (see L<perlform>) a list of values according to the
1743contents of PICTURE, placing the output into the format output
7660c0ab 1744accumulator, C<$^A> (or C<$ACCUMULATOR> in English).
19799a22 1745Eventually, when a C<write> is done, the contents of
a0d0e21e 1746C<$^A> are written to some filehandle, but you could also read C<$^A>
7660c0ab 1747yourself and then set C<$^A> back to C<"">. Note that a format typically
19799a22 1748does one C<formline> per line of form, but the C<formline> function itself
748a9306 1749doesn't care how many newlines are embedded in the PICTURE. This means
4633a7c4 1750that the C<~> and C<~~> tokens will treat the entire PICTURE as a single line.
748a9306
LW
1751You may therefore need to use multiple formlines to implement a single
1752record format, just like the format compiler.
1753
19799a22 1754Be careful if you put double quotes around the picture, because an C<@>
748a9306 1755character may be taken to mean the beginning of an array name.
19799a22 1756C<formline> always returns true. See L<perlform> for other examples.
a0d0e21e
LW
1757
1758=item getc FILEHANDLE
1759
1760=item getc
1761
1762Returns the next character from the input file attached to FILEHANDLE,
2b5ab1e7
TC
1763or the undefined value at end of file, or if there was an error.
1764If FILEHANDLE is omitted, reads from STDIN. This is not particularly
1765efficient. However, it cannot be used by itself to fetch single
1766characters without waiting for the user to hit enter. For that, try
1767something more like:
4633a7c4
LW
1768
1769 if ($BSD_STYLE) {
1770 system "stty cbreak </dev/tty >/dev/tty 2>&1";
1771 }
1772 else {
54310121 1773 system "stty", '-icanon', 'eol', "\001";
4633a7c4
LW
1774 }
1775
1776 $key = getc(STDIN);
1777
1778 if ($BSD_STYLE) {
1779 system "stty -cbreak </dev/tty >/dev/tty 2>&1";
1780 }
1781 else {
5f05dabc 1782 system "stty", 'icanon', 'eol', '^@'; # ASCII null
4633a7c4
LW
1783 }
1784 print "\n";
1785
54310121 1786Determination of whether $BSD_STYLE should be set
1787is left as an exercise to the reader.
cb1a09d0 1788
19799a22 1789The C<POSIX::getattr> function can do this more portably on
2b5ab1e7
TC
1790systems purporting POSIX compliance. See also the C<Term::ReadKey>
1791module from your nearest CPAN site; details on CPAN can be found on
1792L<perlmodlib/CPAN>.
a0d0e21e
LW
1793
1794=item getlogin
1795
5a964f20
TC
1796Implements the C library function of the same name, which on most
1797systems returns the current login from F</etc/utmp>, if any. If null,
19799a22 1798use C<getpwuid>.
a0d0e21e 1799
f86702cc 1800 $login = getlogin || getpwuid($<) || "Kilroy";
a0d0e21e 1801
19799a22
GS
1802Do not consider C<getlogin> for authentication: it is not as
1803secure as C<getpwuid>.
4633a7c4 1804
a0d0e21e
LW
1805=item getpeername SOCKET
1806
1807Returns the packed sockaddr address of other end of the SOCKET connection.
1808
4633a7c4
LW
1809 use Socket;
1810 $hersockaddr = getpeername(SOCK);
19799a22 1811 ($port, $iaddr) = sockaddr_in($hersockaddr);
4633a7c4
LW
1812 $herhostname = gethostbyaddr($iaddr, AF_INET);
1813 $herstraddr = inet_ntoa($iaddr);
a0d0e21e
LW
1814
1815=item getpgrp PID
1816
47e29363 1817Returns the current process group for the specified PID. Use
7660c0ab 1818a PID of C<0> to get the current process group for the
4633a7c4 1819current process. Will raise an exception if used on a machine that
f86cebdf 1820doesn't implement getpgrp(2). If PID is omitted, returns process
19799a22 1821group of current process. Note that the POSIX version of C<getpgrp>
7660c0ab 1822does not accept a PID argument, so only C<PID==0> is truly portable.
a0d0e21e
LW
1823
1824=item getppid
1825
1826Returns the process id of the parent process.
1827
1828=item getpriority WHICH,WHO
1829
4633a7c4
LW
1830Returns the current priority for a process, a process group, or a user.
1831(See L<getpriority(2)>.) Will raise a fatal exception if used on a
f86cebdf 1832machine that doesn't implement getpriority(2).
a0d0e21e
LW
1833
1834=item getpwnam NAME
1835
1836=item getgrnam NAME
1837
1838=item gethostbyname NAME
1839
1840=item getnetbyname NAME
1841
1842=item getprotobyname NAME
1843
1844=item getpwuid UID
1845
1846=item getgrgid GID
1847
1848=item getservbyname NAME,PROTO
1849
1850=item gethostbyaddr ADDR,ADDRTYPE
1851
1852=item getnetbyaddr ADDR,ADDRTYPE
1853
1854=item getprotobynumber NUMBER
1855
1856=item getservbyport PORT,PROTO
1857
1858=item getpwent
1859
1860=item getgrent
1861
1862=item gethostent
1863
1864=item getnetent
1865
1866=item getprotoent
1867
1868=item getservent
1869
1870=item setpwent
1871
1872=item setgrent
1873
1874=item sethostent STAYOPEN
1875
1876=item setnetent STAYOPEN
1877
1878=item setprotoent STAYOPEN
1879
1880=item setservent STAYOPEN
1881
1882=item endpwent
1883
1884=item endgrent
1885
1886=item endhostent
1887
1888=item endnetent
1889
1890=item endprotoent
1891
1892=item endservent
1893
1894These routines perform the same functions as their counterparts in the
5a964f20 1895system library. In list context, the return values from the
a0d0e21e
LW
1896various get routines are as follows:
1897
1898 ($name,$passwd,$uid,$gid,
6ee623d5 1899 $quota,$comment,$gcos,$dir,$shell,$expire) = getpw*
a0d0e21e
LW
1900 ($name,$passwd,$gid,$members) = getgr*
1901 ($name,$aliases,$addrtype,$length,@addrs) = gethost*
1902 ($name,$aliases,$addrtype,$net) = getnet*
1903 ($name,$aliases,$proto) = getproto*
1904 ($name,$aliases,$port,$proto) = getserv*
1905
1906(If the entry doesn't exist you get a null list.)
1907
4602f195
JH
1908The exact meaning of the $gcos field varies but it usually contains
1909the real name of the user (as opposed to the login name) and other
1910information pertaining to the user. Beware, however, that in many
1911system users are able to change this information and therefore it
106325ad 1912cannot be trusted and therefore the $gcos is tainted (see
2959b6e3
JH
1913L<perlsec>). The $passwd and $shell, user's encrypted password and
1914login shell, are also tainted, because of the same reason.
4602f195 1915
5a964f20 1916In scalar context, you get the name, unless the function was a
a0d0e21e
LW
1917lookup by name, in which case you get the other thing, whatever it is.
1918(If the entry doesn't exist you get the undefined value.) For example:
1919
5a964f20
TC
1920 $uid = getpwnam($name);
1921 $name = getpwuid($num);
1922 $name = getpwent();
1923 $gid = getgrnam($name);
1924 $name = getgrgid($num;
1925 $name = getgrent();
1926 #etc.
a0d0e21e 1927
4602f195
JH
1928In I<getpw*()> the fields $quota, $comment, and $expire are special
1929cases in the sense that in many systems they are unsupported. If the
1930$quota is unsupported, it is an empty scalar. If it is supported, it
1931usually encodes the disk quota. If the $comment field is unsupported,
1932it is an empty scalar. If it is supported it usually encodes some
1933administrative comment about the user. In some systems the $quota
1934field may be $change or $age, fields that have to do with password
1935aging. In some systems the $comment field may be $class. The $expire
1936field, if present, encodes the expiration period of the account or the
1937password. For the availability and the exact meaning of these fields
1938in your system, please consult your getpwnam(3) documentation and your
1939F<pwd.h> file. You can also find out from within Perl what your
1940$quota and $comment fields mean and whether you have the $expire field
1941by using the C<Config> module and the values C<d_pwquota>, C<d_pwage>,
1942C<d_pwchange>, C<d_pwcomment>, and C<d_pwexpire>. Shadow password
1943files are only supported if your vendor has implemented them in the
1944intuitive fashion that calling the regular C library routines gets the
5d3a0a3b
GS
1945shadow versions if you're running under privilege or if there exists
1946the shadow(3) functions as found in System V ( this includes Solaris
1947and Linux.) Those systems which implement a proprietary shadow password
1948facility are unlikely to be supported.
6ee623d5 1949
19799a22 1950The $members value returned by I<getgr*()> is a space separated list of
a0d0e21e
LW
1951the login names of the members of the group.
1952
1953For the I<gethost*()> functions, if the C<h_errno> variable is supported in
1954C, it will be returned to you via C<$?> if the function call fails. The
7660c0ab 1955C<@addrs> value returned by a successful call is a list of the raw
a0d0e21e
LW
1956addresses returned by the corresponding system library call. In the
1957Internet domain, each address is four bytes long and you can unpack it
1958by saying something like:
1959
1960 ($a,$b,$c,$d) = unpack('C4',$addr[0]);
1961
2b5ab1e7
TC
1962The Socket library makes this slightly easier:
1963
1964 use Socket;
1965 $iaddr = inet_aton("127.1"); # or whatever address
1966 $name = gethostbyaddr($iaddr, AF_INET);
1967
1968 # or going the other way
19799a22 1969 $straddr = inet_ntoa($iaddr);
2b5ab1e7 1970
19799a22
GS
1971If you get tired of remembering which element of the return list
1972contains which return value, by-name interfaces are provided
1973in standard modules: C<File::stat>, C<Net::hostent>, C<Net::netent>,
1974C<Net::protoent>, C<Net::servent>, C<Time::gmtime>, C<Time::localtime>,
1975and C<User::grent>. These override the normal built-ins, supplying
1976versions that return objects with the appropriate names
1977for each field. For example:
5a964f20
TC
1978
1979 use File::stat;
1980 use User::pwent;
1981 $is_his = (stat($filename)->uid == pwent($whoever)->uid);
1982
b76cc8ba
NIS
1983Even though it looks like they're the same method calls (uid),
1984they aren't, because a C<File::stat> object is different from
19799a22 1985a C<User::pwent> object.
5a964f20 1986
a0d0e21e
LW
1987=item getsockname SOCKET
1988
19799a22
GS
1989Returns the packed sockaddr address of this end of the SOCKET connection,
1990in case you don't know the address because you have several different
1991IPs that the connection might have come in on.
a0d0e21e 1992
4633a7c4
LW
1993 use Socket;
1994 $mysockaddr = getsockname(SOCK);
19799a22 1995 ($port, $myaddr) = sockaddr_in($mysockaddr);
b76cc8ba 1996 printf "Connect to %s [%s]\n",
19799a22
GS
1997 scalar gethostbyaddr($myaddr, AF_INET),
1998 inet_ntoa($myaddr);
a0d0e21e
LW
1999
2000=item getsockopt SOCKET,LEVEL,OPTNAME
2001
5a964f20 2002Returns the socket option requested, or undef if there is an error.
a0d0e21e
LW
2003
2004=item glob EXPR
2005
0a753a76 2006=item glob
2007
2b5ab1e7
TC
2008Returns the value of EXPR with filename expansions such as the
2009standard Unix shell F</bin/csh> would do. This is the internal function
61eff3bc
JH
2010implementing the C<< <*.c> >> operator, but you can use it directly.
2011If EXPR is omitted, C<$_> is used. The C<< <*.c> >> operator is
2b5ab1e7 2012discussed in more detail in L<perlop/"I/O Operators">.
a0d0e21e 2013
3a4b19e4
GS
2014Beginning with v5.6.0, this operator is implemented using the standard
2015C<File::Glob> extension. See L<File::Glob> for details.
2016
a0d0e21e
LW
2017=item gmtime EXPR
2018
d1be9408 2019Converts a time as returned by the time function to an 8-element list
54310121 2020with the time localized for the standard Greenwich time zone.
4633a7c4 2021Typically used as follows:
a0d0e21e 2022
b76cc8ba 2023 # 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
48a26b3a 2024 ($sec,$min,$hour,$mday,$mon,$year,$wday,$yday) =
a0d0e21e
LW
2025 gmtime(time);
2026
48a26b3a
GS
2027All list elements are numeric, and come straight out of the C `struct
2028tm'. $sec, $min, and $hour are the seconds, minutes, and hours of the
2029specified time. $mday is the day of the month, and $mon is the month
2030itself, in the range C<0..11> with 0 indicating January and 11
2031indicating December. $year is the number of years since 1900. That
2032is, $year is C<123> in year 2023. $wday is the day of the week, with
20330 indicating Sunday and 3 indicating Wednesday. $yday is the day of
b76cc8ba 2034the year, in the range C<0..364> (or C<0..365> in leap years.)
48a26b3a
GS
2035
2036Note that the $year element is I<not> simply the last two digits of
2037the year. If you assume it is, then you create non-Y2K-compliant
2038programs--and you wouldn't want to do that, would you?
2f9daede 2039
abd75f24
GS
2040The proper way to get a complete 4-digit year is simply:
2041
2042 $year += 1900;
2043
2044And to get the last two digits of the year (e.g., '01' in 2001) do:
2045
2046 $year = sprintf("%02d", $year % 100);
2047
48a26b3a 2048If EXPR is omitted, C<gmtime()> uses the current time (C<gmtime(time)>).
a0d0e21e 2049
48a26b3a 2050In scalar context, C<gmtime()> returns the ctime(3) value:
0a753a76 2051
2052 $now_string = gmtime; # e.g., "Thu Oct 13 04:54:34 1994"
2053
19799a22 2054Also see the C<timegm> function provided by the C<Time::Local> module,
f86cebdf 2055and the strftime(3) function available via the POSIX module.
7660c0ab 2056
2b5ab1e7
TC
2057This scalar value is B<not> locale dependent (see L<perllocale>), but
2058is instead a Perl builtin. Also see the C<Time::Local> module, and the
2059strftime(3) and mktime(3) functions available via the POSIX module. To
7660c0ab
A
2060get somewhat similar but locale dependent date strings, set up your
2061locale environment variables appropriately (please see L<perllocale>)
2062and try for example:
2063
2064 use POSIX qw(strftime);
2b5ab1e7 2065 $now_string = strftime "%a %b %e %H:%M:%S %Y", gmtime;
7660c0ab 2066
2b5ab1e7
TC
2067Note that the C<%a> and C<%b> escapes, which represent the short forms
2068of the day of the week and the month of the year, may not necessarily
2069be three characters wide in all locales.
0a753a76 2070
a0d0e21e
LW
2071=item goto LABEL
2072
748a9306
LW
2073=item goto EXPR
2074
a0d0e21e
LW
2075=item goto &NAME
2076
7660c0ab 2077The C<goto-LABEL> form finds the statement labeled with LABEL and resumes
a0d0e21e 2078execution there. It may not be used to go into any construct that
7660c0ab 2079requires initialization, such as a subroutine or a C<foreach> loop. It
0a753a76 2080also can't be used to go into a construct that is optimized away,
19799a22 2081or to get out of a block or subroutine given to C<sort>.
0a753a76 2082It can be used to go almost anywhere else within the dynamic scope,
a0d0e21e 2083including out of subroutines, but it's usually better to use some other
19799a22 2084construct such as C<last> or C<die>. The author of Perl has never felt the
7660c0ab 2085need to use this form of C<goto> (in Perl, that is--C is another matter).
a0d0e21e 2086
7660c0ab
A
2087The C<goto-EXPR> form expects a label name, whose scope will be resolved
2088dynamically. This allows for computed C<goto>s per FORTRAN, but isn't
748a9306
LW
2089necessarily recommended if you're optimizing for maintainability:
2090
2091 goto ("FOO", "BAR", "GLARCH")[$i];
2092
6cb9131c
GS
2093The C<goto-&NAME> form is quite different from the other forms of C<goto>.
2094In fact, it isn't a goto in the normal sense at all, and doesn't have
2095the stigma associated with other gotos. Instead, it
2096substitutes a call to the named subroutine for the currently running
2097subroutine. This is used by C<AUTOLOAD> subroutines that wish to load
2098another subroutine and then pretend that the other subroutine had been
2099called in the first place (except that any modifications to C<@_>
2100in the current subroutine are propagated to the other subroutine.)
2101After the C<goto>, not even C<caller> will be able to tell that this
2102routine was called first.
2103
2104NAME needn't be the name of a subroutine; it can be a scalar variable
2105containing a code reference, or a block which evaluates to a code
2106reference.
a0d0e21e
LW
2107
2108=item grep BLOCK LIST
2109
2110=item grep EXPR,LIST
2111
2b5ab1e7
TC
2112This is similar in spirit to, but not the same as, grep(1) and its
2113relatives. In particular, it is not limited to using regular expressions.
2f9daede 2114
a0d0e21e 2115Evaluates the BLOCK or EXPR for each element of LIST (locally setting
7660c0ab 2116C<$_> to each element) and returns the list value consisting of those
19799a22
GS
2117elements for which the expression evaluated to true. In scalar
2118context, returns the number of times the expression was true.
a0d0e21e
LW
2119
2120 @foo = grep(!/^#/, @bar); # weed out comments
2121
2122or equivalently,
2123
2124 @foo = grep {!/^#/} @bar; # weed out comments
2125
be3174d2
GS
2126Note that C<$_> is an alias to the list value, so it can be used to
2127modify the elements of the LIST. While this is useful and supported,
2128it can cause bizarre results if the elements of LIST are not variables.
2b5ab1e7
TC
2129Similarly, grep returns aliases into the original list, much as a for
2130loop's index variable aliases the list elements. That is, modifying an
19799a22
GS
2131element of a list returned by grep (for example, in a C<foreach>, C<map>
2132or another C<grep>) actually modifies the element in the original list.
2b5ab1e7 2133This is usually something to be avoided when writing clear code.
a0d0e21e 2134
19799a22 2135See also L</map> for a list composed of the results of the BLOCK or EXPR.
38325410 2136
a0d0e21e
LW
2137=item hex EXPR
2138
54310121 2139=item hex
bbce6d69 2140
2b5ab1e7
TC
2141Interprets EXPR as a hex string and returns the corresponding value.
2142(To convert strings that might start with either 0, 0x, or 0b, see
2143L</oct>.) If EXPR is omitted, uses C<$_>.
2f9daede
TP
2144
2145 print hex '0xAf'; # prints '175'
2146 print hex 'aF'; # same
a0d0e21e 2147
19799a22 2148Hex strings may only represent integers. Strings that would cause
53305cf1
NC
2149integer overflow trigger a warning. Leading whitespace is not stripped,
2150unlike oct().
19799a22 2151
a0d0e21e
LW
2152=item import
2153
19799a22 2154There is no builtin C<import> function. It is just an ordinary
4633a7c4 2155method (subroutine) defined (or inherited) by modules that wish to export
19799a22 2156names to another module. The C<use> function calls the C<import> method
cea6626f 2157for the package used. See also L</use>, L<perlmod>, and L<Exporter>.
a0d0e21e
LW
2158
2159=item index STR,SUBSTR,POSITION
2160
2161=item index STR,SUBSTR
2162
2b5ab1e7
TC
2163The index function searches for one string within another, but without
2164the wildcard-like behavior of a full regular-expression pattern match.
2165It returns the position of the first occurrence of SUBSTR in STR at
2166or after POSITION. If POSITION is omitted, starts searching from the
2167beginning of the string. The return value is based at C<0> (or whatever
2168you've set the C<$[> variable to--but don't do that). If the substring
2169is not found, returns one less than the base, ordinarily C<-1>.
a0d0e21e
LW
2170
2171=item int EXPR
2172
54310121 2173=item int
bbce6d69 2174
7660c0ab 2175Returns the integer portion of EXPR. If EXPR is omitted, uses C<$_>.
2b5ab1e7
TC
2176You should not use this function for rounding: one because it truncates
2177towards C<0>, and two because machine representations of floating point
2178numbers can sometimes produce counterintuitive results. For example,
2179C<int(-6.725/0.025)> produces -268 rather than the correct -269; that's
2180because it's really more like -268.99999999999994315658 instead. Usually,
19799a22 2181the C<sprintf>, C<printf>, or the C<POSIX::floor> and C<POSIX::ceil>
2b5ab1e7 2182functions will serve you better than will int().
a0d0e21e
LW
2183
2184=item ioctl FILEHANDLE,FUNCTION,SCALAR
2185
2b5ab1e7 2186Implements the ioctl(2) function. You'll probably first have to say
a0d0e21e 2187
4633a7c4 2188 require "ioctl.ph"; # probably in /usr/local/lib/perl/ioctl.ph
a0d0e21e 2189
2b5ab1e7 2190to get the correct function definitions. If F<ioctl.ph> doesn't
a0d0e21e 2191exist or doesn't have the correct definitions you'll have to roll your
61eff3bc 2192own, based on your C header files such as F<< <sys/ioctl.h> >>.
5a964f20 2193(There is a Perl script called B<h2ph> that comes with the Perl kit that
54310121 2194may help you in this, but it's nontrivial.) SCALAR will be read and/or
4633a7c4 2195written depending on the FUNCTION--a pointer to the string value of SCALAR
19799a22 2196will be passed as the third argument of the actual C<ioctl> call. (If SCALAR
4633a7c4
LW
2197has no string value but does have a numeric value, that value will be
2198passed rather than a pointer to the string value. To guarantee this to be
19799a22
GS
2199true, add a C<0> to the scalar before using it.) The C<pack> and C<unpack>
2200functions may be needed to manipulate the values of structures used by
b76cc8ba 2201C<ioctl>.
a0d0e21e 2202
19799a22 2203The return value of C<ioctl> (and C<fcntl>) is as follows:
a0d0e21e
LW
2204
2205 if OS returns: then Perl returns:
2206 -1 undefined value
2207 0 string "0 but true"
2208 anything else that number
2209
19799a22 2210Thus Perl returns true on success and false on failure, yet you can
a0d0e21e
LW
2211still easily determine the actual value returned by the operating
2212system:
2213
2b5ab1e7 2214 $retval = ioctl(...) || -1;
a0d0e21e
LW
2215 printf "System returned %d\n", $retval;
2216
c2611fb3 2217The special string "C<0> but true" is exempt from B<-w> complaints
5a964f20
TC
2218about improper numeric conversions.
2219
19799a22
GS
2220Here's an example of setting a filehandle named C<REMOTE> to be
2221non-blocking at the system level. You'll have to negotiate C<$|>
2222on your own, though.
2223
2224 use Fcntl qw(F_GETFL F_SETFL O_NONBLOCK);
2225
2226 $flags = fcntl(REMOTE, F_GETFL, 0)
2227 or die "Can't get flags for the socket: $!\n";
2228
2229 $flags = fcntl(REMOTE, F_SETFL, $flags | O_NONBLOCK)
2230 or die "Can't set flags for the socket: $!\n";
2231
a0d0e21e
LW
2232=item join EXPR,LIST
2233
2b5ab1e7
TC
2234Joins the separate strings of LIST into a single string with fields
2235separated by the value of EXPR, and returns that new string. Example:
a0d0e21e 2236
2b5ab1e7 2237 $rec = join(':', $login,$passwd,$uid,$gid,$gcos,$home,$shell);
a0d0e21e 2238
eb6e2d6f
GS
2239Beware that unlike C<split>, C<join> doesn't take a pattern as its
2240first argument. Compare L</split>.
a0d0e21e 2241
aa689395 2242=item keys HASH
2243
19799a22 2244Returns a list consisting of all the keys of the named hash. (In
1d2dff63 2245scalar context, returns the number of keys.) The keys are returned in
ab192400
GS
2246an apparently random order. The actual random order is subject to
2247change in future versions of perl, but it is guaranteed to be the same
19799a22 2248order as either the C<values> or C<each> function produces (given
ab192400
GS
2249that the hash has not been modified). As a side effect, it resets
2250HASH's iterator.
a0d0e21e 2251
aa689395 2252Here is yet another way to print your environment:
a0d0e21e
LW
2253
2254 @keys = keys %ENV;
2255 @values = values %ENV;
b76cc8ba 2256 while (@keys) {
a0d0e21e
LW
2257 print pop(@keys), '=', pop(@values), "\n";
2258 }
2259
2260or how about sorted by key:
2261
2262 foreach $key (sort(keys %ENV)) {
2263 print $key, '=', $ENV{$key}, "\n";
2264 }
2265
8ea1e5d4
GS
2266The returned values are copies of the original keys in the hash, so
2267modifying them will not affect the original hash. Compare L</values>.
2268
19799a22 2269To sort a hash by value, you'll need to use a C<sort> function.
aa689395 2270Here's a descending numeric sort of a hash by its values:
4633a7c4 2271
5a964f20 2272 foreach $key (sort { $hash{$b} <=> $hash{$a} } keys %hash) {
4633a7c4
LW
2273 printf "%4d %s\n", $hash{$key}, $key;
2274 }
2275
19799a22 2276As an lvalue C<keys> allows you to increase the number of hash buckets
aa689395 2277allocated for the given hash. This can gain you a measure of efficiency if
2278you know the hash is going to get big. (This is similar to pre-extending
2279an array by assigning a larger number to $#array.) If you say
55497cff 2280
2281 keys %hash = 200;
2282
ab192400
GS
2283then C<%hash> will have at least 200 buckets allocated for it--256 of them,
2284in fact, since it rounds up to the next power of two. These
55497cff 2285buckets will be retained even if you do C<%hash = ()>, use C<undef
2286%hash> if you want to free the storage while C<%hash> is still in scope.
2287You can't shrink the number of buckets allocated for the hash using
19799a22 2288C<keys> in this way (but you needn't worry about doing this by accident,
55497cff 2289as trying has no effect).
2290
19799a22 2291See also C<each>, C<values> and C<sort>.
ab192400 2292
b350dd2f 2293=item kill SIGNAL, LIST
a0d0e21e 2294
b350dd2f 2295Sends a signal to a list of processes. Returns the number of
517db077
GS
2296processes successfully signaled (which is not necessarily the
2297same as the number actually killed).
a0d0e21e
LW
2298
2299 $cnt = kill 1, $child1, $child2;
2300 kill 9, @goners;
2301
b350dd2f
GS
2302If SIGNAL is zero, no signal is sent to the process. This is a
2303useful way to check that the process is alive and hasn't changed
2304its UID. See L<perlport> for notes on the portability of this
2305construct.
2306
2307Unlike in the shell, if SIGNAL is negative, it kills
4633a7c4
LW
2308process groups instead of processes. (On System V, a negative I<PROCESS>
2309number will also kill process groups, but that's not portable.) That
2310means you usually want to use positive not negative signals. You may also
da0045b7 2311use a signal name in quotes. See L<perlipc/"Signals"> for details.
a0d0e21e
LW
2312
2313=item last LABEL
2314
2315=item last
2316
2317The C<last> command is like the C<break> statement in C (as used in
2318loops); it immediately exits the loop in question. If the LABEL is
2319omitted, the command refers to the innermost enclosing loop. The
2320C<continue> block, if any, is not executed:
2321
4633a7c4
LW
2322 LINE: while (<STDIN>) {
2323 last LINE if /^$/; # exit when done with header
5a964f20 2324 #...
a0d0e21e
LW
2325 }
2326
4968c1e4 2327C<last> cannot be used to exit a block which returns a value such as
2b5ab1e7
TC
2328C<eval {}>, C<sub {}> or C<do {}>, and should not be used to exit
2329a grep() or map() operation.
4968c1e4 2330
6c1372ed
GS
2331Note that a block by itself is semantically identical to a loop
2332that executes once. Thus C<last> can be used to effect an early
2333exit out of such a block.
2334
98293880
JH
2335See also L</continue> for an illustration of how C<last>, C<next>, and
2336C<redo> work.
1d2dff63 2337
a0d0e21e
LW
2338=item lc EXPR
2339
54310121 2340=item lc
bbce6d69 2341
d1be9408 2342Returns a lowercased version of EXPR. This is the internal function
ad0029c4
JH
2343implementing the C<\L> escape in double-quoted strings. Respects
2344current LC_CTYPE locale if C<use locale> in force. See L<perllocale>
983ffd37 2345and L<perlunicode> for more details about locale and Unicode support.
a0d0e21e 2346
7660c0ab 2347If EXPR is omitted, uses C<$_>.
bbce6d69 2348
a0d0e21e
LW
2349=item lcfirst EXPR
2350
54310121 2351=item lcfirst
bbce6d69 2352
ad0029c4
JH
2353Returns the value of EXPR with the first character lowercased. This
2354is the internal function implementing the C<\l> escape in
2355double-quoted strings. Respects current LC_CTYPE locale if C<use
983ffd37
JH
2356locale> in force. See L<perllocale> and L<perlunicode> for more
2357details about locale and Unicode support.
a0d0e21e 2358
7660c0ab 2359If EXPR is omitted, uses C<$_>.
bbce6d69 2360
a0d0e21e
LW
2361=item length EXPR
2362
54310121 2363=item length
bbce6d69 2364
a0ed51b3 2365Returns the length in characters of the value of EXPR. If EXPR is
b76cc8ba 2366omitted, returns length of C<$_>. Note that this cannot be used on
2b5ab1e7
TC
2367an entire array or hash to find out how many elements these have.
2368For that, use C<scalar @array> and C<scalar keys %hash> respectively.
a0d0e21e
LW
2369
2370=item link OLDFILE,NEWFILE
2371
19799a22 2372Creates a new filename linked to the old filename. Returns true for
b76cc8ba 2373success, false otherwise.
a0d0e21e
LW
2374
2375=item listen SOCKET,QUEUESIZE
2376
19799a22 2377Does the same thing that the listen system call does. Returns true if
b76cc8ba 2378it succeeded, false otherwise. See the example in
cea6626f 2379L<perlipc/"Sockets: Client/Server Communication">.
a0d0e21e
LW
2380
2381=item local EXPR
2382
19799a22 2383You really probably want to be using C<my> instead, because C<local> isn't
b76cc8ba 2384what most people think of as "local". See
13a2d996 2385L<perlsub/"Private Variables via my()"> for details.
2b5ab1e7 2386
5a964f20
TC
2387A local modifies the listed variables to be local to the enclosing
2388block, file, or eval. If more than one value is listed, the list must
2389be placed in parentheses. See L<perlsub/"Temporary Values via local()">
2390for details, including issues with tied arrays and hashes.
a0d0e21e 2391
a0d0e21e
LW
2392=item localtime EXPR
2393
19799a22 2394Converts a time as returned by the time function to a 9-element list
5f05dabc 2395with the time analyzed for the local time zone. Typically used as
a0d0e21e
LW
2396follows:
2397
54310121 2398 # 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
a0d0e21e
LW
2399 ($sec,$min,$hour,$mday,$mon,$year,$wday,$yday,$isdst) =
2400 localtime(time);
2401
48a26b3a
GS
2402All list elements are numeric, and come straight out of the C `struct
2403tm'. $sec, $min, and $hour are the seconds, minutes, and hours of the
2404specified time. $mday is the day of the month, and $mon is the month
2405itself, in the range C<0..11> with 0 indicating January and 11
2406indicating December. $year is the number of years since 1900. That
2407is, $year is C<123> in year 2023. $wday is the day of the week, with
24080 indicating Sunday and 3 indicating Wednesday. $yday is the day of
874b1813 2409the year, in the range C<0..364> (or C<0..365> in leap years.) $isdst
48a26b3a
GS
2410is true if the specified time occurs during daylight savings time,
2411false otherwise.
2412
2413Note that the $year element is I<not> simply the last two digits of
2414the year. If you assume it is, then you create non-Y2K-compliant
2415programs--and you wouldn't want to do that, would you?
54310121 2416
abd75f24
GS
2417The proper way to get a complete 4-digit year is simply:
2418
2419 $year += 1900;
2420
2421And to get the last two digits of the year (e.g., '01' in 2001) do:
2422
2423 $year = sprintf("%02d", $year % 100);
2424
48a26b3a 2425If EXPR is omitted, C<localtime()> uses the current time (C<localtime(time)>).
a0d0e21e 2426
48a26b3a 2427In scalar context, C<localtime()> returns the ctime(3) value:
a0d0e21e 2428
5f05dabc 2429 $now_string = localtime; # e.g., "Thu Oct 13 04:54:34 1994"
a0d0e21e 2430
a3cb178b 2431This scalar value is B<not> locale dependent, see L<perllocale>, but
68f8bed4
JH
2432instead a Perl builtin. Also see the C<Time::Local> module
2433(to convert the second, minutes, hours, ... back to seconds since the
2434stroke of midnight the 1st of January 1970, the value returned by
ca6e1c26 2435time()), and the strftime(3) and mktime(3) functions available via the
68f8bed4
JH
2436POSIX module. To get somewhat similar but locale dependent date
2437strings, set up your locale environment variables appropriately
2438(please see L<perllocale>) and try for example:
a3cb178b 2439
5a964f20 2440 use POSIX qw(strftime);
2b5ab1e7 2441 $now_string = strftime "%a %b %e %H:%M:%S %Y", localtime;
a3cb178b
GS
2442
2443Note that the C<%a> and C<%b>, the short forms of the day of the week
2444and the month of the year, may not necessarily be three characters wide.
a0d0e21e 2445
07698885 2446=item lock THING
19799a22
GS
2447
2448This function places an advisory lock on a variable, subroutine,
2449or referenced object contained in I<THING> until the lock goes out
2450of scope. This is a built-in function only if your version of Perl
43d3ddbe
JH
2451was built with threading enabled, and if you've said C<use Thread>.
2452Otherwise a user-defined function by this name will be called.
2453See L<Thread>.
19799a22 2454
a0d0e21e
LW
2455=item log EXPR
2456
54310121 2457=item log
bbce6d69 2458
2b5ab1e7
TC
2459Returns the natural logarithm (base I<e>) of EXPR. If EXPR is omitted,
2460returns log of C<$_>. To get the log of another base, use basic algebra:
19799a22 2461The base-N log of a number is equal to the natural log of that number
2b5ab1e7
TC
2462divided by the natural log of N. For example:
2463
2464 sub log10 {
2465 my $n = shift;
2466 return log($n)/log(10);
b76cc8ba 2467 }
2b5ab1e7
TC
2468
2469See also L</exp> for the inverse operation.
a0d0e21e 2470
a0d0e21e
LW
2471=item lstat EXPR
2472
54310121 2473=item lstat
bbce6d69 2474
19799a22 2475Does the same thing as the C<stat> function (including setting the
5a964f20
TC
2476special C<_> filehandle) but stats a symbolic link instead of the file
2477the symbolic link points to. If symbolic links are unimplemented on
19799a22 2478your system, a normal C<stat> is done.
a0d0e21e 2479
7660c0ab 2480If EXPR is omitted, stats C<$_>.
bbce6d69 2481
a0d0e21e
LW
2482=item m//
2483
2484The match operator. See L<perlop>.
2485
2486=item map BLOCK LIST
2487
2488=item map EXPR,LIST
2489
19799a22
GS
2490Evaluates the BLOCK or EXPR for each element of LIST (locally setting
2491C<$_> to each element) and returns the list value composed of the
2492results of each such evaluation. In scalar context, returns the
2493total number of elements so generated. Evaluates BLOCK or EXPR in
2494list context, so each element of LIST may produce zero, one, or
2495more elements in the returned value.
dd99ebda 2496
a0d0e21e
LW
2497 @chars = map(chr, @nums);
2498
2499translates a list of numbers to the corresponding characters. And
2500
4633a7c4 2501 %hash = map { getkey($_) => $_ } @array;
a0d0e21e
LW
2502
2503is just a funny way to write
2504
2505 %hash = ();
2506 foreach $_ (@array) {
4633a7c4 2507 $hash{getkey($_)} = $_;
a0d0e21e
LW
2508 }
2509
be3174d2
GS
2510Note that C<$_> is an alias to the list value, so it can be used to
2511modify the elements of the LIST. While this is useful and supported,
2512it can cause bizarre results if the elements of LIST are not variables.
2b5ab1e7
TC
2513Using a regular C<foreach> loop for this purpose would be clearer in
2514most cases. See also L</grep> for an array composed of those items of
2515the original list for which the BLOCK or EXPR evaluates to true.
fb73857a 2516
205fdb4d
NC
2517C<{> starts both hash references and blocks, so C<map { ...> could be either
2518the start of map BLOCK LIST or map EXPR, LIST. Because perl doesn't look
2519ahead for the closing C<}> it has to take a guess at which its dealing with
2520based what it finds just after the C<{>. Usually it gets it right, but if it
2521doesn't it won't realize something is wrong until it gets to the C<}> and
2522encounters the missing (or unexpected) comma. The syntax error will be
2523reported close to the C<}> but you'll need to change something near the C<{>
2524such as using a unary C<+> to give perl some help:
2525
2526 %hash = map { "\L$_", 1 } @array # perl guesses EXPR. wrong
2527 %hash = map { +"\L$_", 1 } @array # perl guesses BLOCK. right
2528 %hash = map { ("\L$_", 1) } @array # this also works
2529 %hash = map { lc($_), 1 } @array # as does this.
2530 %hash = map +( lc($_), 1 ), @array # this is EXPR and works!
cea6626f 2531
205fdb4d
NC
2532 %hash = map ( lc($_), 1 ), @array # evaluates to (1, @array)
2533
2534or to force an anon hash constructor use C<+{>
2535
2536 @hashes = map +{ lc($_), 1 }, @array # EXPR, so needs , at end
2537
2538and you get list of anonymous hashes each with only 1 entry.
2539
19799a22 2540=item mkdir FILENAME,MASK
a0d0e21e 2541
5a211162
GS
2542=item mkdir FILENAME
2543
0591cd52 2544Creates the directory specified by FILENAME, with permissions
19799a22
GS
2545specified by MASK (as modified by C<umask>). If it succeeds it
2546returns true, otherwise it returns false and sets C<$!> (errno).
5a211162 2547If omitted, MASK defaults to 0777.
0591cd52 2548
19799a22 2549In general, it is better to create directories with permissive MASK,
0591cd52 2550and let the user modify that with their C<umask>, than it is to supply
19799a22 2551a restrictive MASK and give the user no way to be more permissive.
0591cd52
NT
2552The exceptions to this rule are when the file or directory should be
2553kept private (mail files, for instance). The perlfunc(1) entry on
19799a22 2554C<umask> discusses the choice of MASK in more detail.
a0d0e21e 2555
cc1852e8
JH
2556Note that according to the POSIX 1003.1-1996 the FILENAME may have any
2557number of trailing slashes. Some operating and filesystems do not get
2558this right, so Perl automatically removes all trailing slashes to keep
2559everyone happy.
2560
a0d0e21e
LW
2561=item msgctl ID,CMD,ARG
2562
f86cebdf 2563Calls the System V IPC function msgctl(2). You'll probably have to say
0ade1984
JH
2564
2565 use IPC::SysV;
2566
7660c0ab
A
2567first to get the correct constant definitions. If CMD is C<IPC_STAT>,
2568then ARG must be a variable which will hold the returned C<msqid_ds>
951ba7fe
GS
2569structure. Returns like C<ioctl>: the undefined value for error,
2570C<"0 but true"> for zero, or the actual return value otherwise. See also
4755096e 2571L<perlipc/"SysV IPC">, C<IPC::SysV>, and C<IPC::Semaphore> documentation.
a0d0e21e
LW
2572
2573=item msgget KEY,FLAGS
2574
f86cebdf 2575Calls the System V IPC function msgget(2). Returns the message queue
4755096e
GS
2576id, or the undefined value if there is an error. See also
2577L<perlipc/"SysV IPC"> and C<IPC::SysV> and C<IPC::Msg> documentation.
a0d0e21e 2578
a0d0e21e
LW
2579=item msgrcv ID,VAR,SIZE,TYPE,FLAGS
2580
2581Calls the System V IPC function msgrcv to receive a message from
2582message queue ID into variable VAR with a maximum message size of
41d6edb2
JH
2583SIZE. Note that when a message is received, the message type as a
2584native long integer will be the first thing in VAR, followed by the
2585actual message. This packing may be opened with C<unpack("l! a*")>.
2586Taints the variable. Returns true if successful, or false if there is
4755096e
GS
2587an error. See also L<perlipc/"SysV IPC">, C<IPC::SysV>, and
2588C<IPC::SysV::Msg> documentation.
41d6edb2
JH
2589
2590=item msgsnd ID,MSG,FLAGS
2591
2592Calls the System V IPC function msgsnd to send the message MSG to the
2593message queue ID. MSG must begin with the native long integer message
2594type, and be followed by the length of the actual message, and finally
2595the message itself. This kind of packing can be achieved with
2596C<pack("l! a*", $type, $message)>. Returns true if successful,
2597or false if there is an error. See also C<IPC::SysV>
2598and C<IPC::SysV::Msg> documentation.
a0d0e21e
LW
2599
2600=item my EXPR
2601
09bef843
SB
2602=item my EXPR : ATTRIBUTES
2603
19799a22
GS
2604A C<my> declares the listed variables to be local (lexically) to the
2605enclosing block, file, or C<eval>. If
5f05dabc 2606more than one value is listed, the list must be placed in parentheses. See
cb1a09d0 2607L<perlsub/"Private Variables via my()"> for details.
4633a7c4 2608
a0d0e21e
LW
2609=item next LABEL
2610
2611=item next
2612
2613The C<next> command is like the C<continue> statement in C; it starts
2614the next iteration of the loop:
2615
4633a7c4
LW
2616 LINE: while (<STDIN>) {
2617 next LINE if /^#/; # discard comments
5a964f20 2618 #...
a0d0e21e
LW
2619 }
2620
2621Note that if there were a C<continue> block on the above, it would get
2622executed even on discarded lines. If the LABEL is omitted, the command
2623refers to the innermost enclosing loop.
2624
4968c1e4 2625C<next> cannot be used to exit a block which returns a value such as
2b5ab1e7
TC
2626C<eval {}>, C<sub {}> or C<do {}>, and should not be used to exit
2627a grep() or map() operation.
4968c1e4 2628
6c1372ed
GS
2629Note that a block by itself is semantically identical to a loop
2630that executes once. Thus C<next> will exit such a block early.
2631
98293880
JH
2632See also L</continue> for an illustration of how C<last>, C<next>, and
2633C<redo> work.
1d2dff63 2634
a0d0e21e
LW
2635=item no Module LIST
2636
7660c0ab 2637See the L</use> function, which C<no> is the opposite of.
a0d0e21e
LW
2638
2639=item oct EXPR
2640
54310121 2641=item oct
bbce6d69 2642
4633a7c4 2643Interprets EXPR as an octal string and returns the corresponding
4f19785b
WSI
2644value. (If EXPR happens to start off with C<0x>, interprets it as a
2645hex string. If EXPR starts off with C<0b>, it is interpreted as a
53305cf1
NC
2646binary string. Leading whitespace is ignored in all three cases.)
2647The following will handle decimal, binary, octal, and hex in the standard
2648Perl or C notation:
a0d0e21e
LW
2649
2650 $val = oct($val) if $val =~ /^0/;
2651
19799a22
GS
2652If EXPR is omitted, uses C<$_>. To go the other way (produce a number
2653in octal), use sprintf() or printf():
2654
2655 $perms = (stat("filename"))[2] & 07777;
2656 $oct_perms = sprintf "%lo", $perms;
2657
2658The oct() function is commonly used when a string such as C<644> needs
2659to be converted into a file mode, for example. (Although perl will
2660automatically convert strings into numbers as needed, this automatic
2661conversion assumes base 10.)
a0d0e21e
LW
2662
2663=item open FILEHANDLE,EXPR
2664
68bd7414
NIS
2665=item open FILEHANDLE,MODE,EXPR
2666
2667=item open FILEHANDLE,MODE,EXPR,LIST
2668
ba964c95
T
2669=item open FILEHANDLE,MODE,REFERENCE
2670
a0d0e21e
LW
2671=item open FILEHANDLE
2672
2673Opens the file whose filename is given by EXPR, and associates it with
ed53a2bb
JH
2674FILEHANDLE.
2675
2676(The following is a comprehensive reference to open(): for a gentler
2677introduction you may consider L<perlopentut>.)
2678
2679If FILEHANDLE is an undefined lexical (C<my>) variable the variable is
2680assigned a reference to a new anonymous filehandle, otherwise if
2681FILEHANDLE is an expression, its value is used as the name of the real
2682filehandle wanted. (This is considered a symbolic reference, so C<use
2683strict 'refs'> should I<not> be in effect.)
2684
2685If EXPR is omitted, the scalar variable of the same name as the
2686FILEHANDLE contains the filename. (Note that lexical variables--those
2687declared with C<my>--will not work for this purpose; so if you're
2688using C<my>, specify EXPR in your call to open.)
2689
2690If three or more arguments are specified then the mode of opening and
2691the file name are separate. If MODE is C<< '<' >> or nothing, the file
2692is opened for input. If MODE is C<< '>' >>, the file is truncated and
2693opened for output, being created if necessary. If MODE is C<<< '>>' >>>,
b76cc8ba 2694the file is opened for appending, again being created if necessary.
5a964f20 2695
ed53a2bb
JH
2696You can put a C<'+'> in front of the C<< '>' >> or C<< '<' >> to
2697indicate that you want both read and write access to the file; thus
2698C<< '+<' >> is almost always preferred for read/write updates--the C<<
2699'+>' >> mode would clobber the file first. You can't usually use
2700either read-write mode for updating textfiles, since they have
2701variable length records. See the B<-i> switch in L<perlrun> for a
2702better approach. The file is created with permissions of C<0666>
2703modified by the process' C<umask> value.
2704
2705These various prefixes correspond to the fopen(3) modes of C<'r'>,
2706C<'r+'>, C<'w'>, C<'w+'>, C<'a'>, and C<'a+'>.
5f05dabc 2707
6170680b
IZ
2708In the 2-arguments (and 1-argument) form of the call the mode and
2709filename should be concatenated (in this order), possibly separated by
68bd7414
NIS
2710spaces. It is possible to omit the mode in these forms if the mode is
2711C<< '<' >>.
6170680b 2712
7660c0ab 2713If the filename begins with C<'|'>, the filename is interpreted as a
5a964f20 2714command to which output is to be piped, and if the filename ends with a
f244e06d
GS
2715C<'|'>, the filename is interpreted as a command which pipes output to
2716us. See L<perlipc/"Using open() for IPC">
19799a22 2717for more examples of this. (You are not allowed to C<open> to a command
5a964f20 2718that pipes both in I<and> out, but see L<IPC::Open2>, L<IPC::Open3>,
4a4eefd0
GS
2719and L<perlipc/"Bidirectional Communication with Another Process">
2720for alternatives.)
cb1a09d0 2721
ed53a2bb
JH
2722For three or more arguments if MODE is C<'|-'>, the filename is
2723interpreted as a command to which output is to be piped, and if MODE
2724is C<'-|'>, the filename is interpreted as a command which pipes
2725output to us. In the 2-arguments (and 1-argument) form one should
2726replace dash (C<'-'>) with the command.
2727See L<perlipc/"Using open() for IPC"> for more examples of this.
2728(You are not allowed to C<open> to a command that pipes both in I<and>
2729out, but see L<IPC::Open2>, L<IPC::Open3>, and
2730L<perlipc/"Bidirectional Communication"> for alternatives.)
2731
2732In the three-or-more argument form of pipe opens, if LIST is specified
2733(extra arguments after the command name) then LIST becomes arguments
2734to the command invoked if the platform supports it. The meaning of
2735C<open> with more than three arguments for non-pipe modes is not yet
2736specified. Experimental "layers" may give extra LIST arguments
2737meaning.
6170680b
IZ
2738
2739In the 2-arguments (and 1-argument) form opening C<'-'> opens STDIN
b76cc8ba 2740and opening C<< '>-' >> opens STDOUT.
6170680b 2741
ed53a2bb
JH
2742You may use the three-argument form of open to specify
2743I<I/O disciplines> that affect how the input and output
9124316e
JH
2744are processed: see L</binmode> and L<open>. For example
2745
2746 open(FH, "<:utf8", "file")
2747
2748will open the UTF-8 encoded file containing Unicode characters,
2749see L<perluniintro>.
ed53a2bb
JH
2750
2751Open returns nonzero upon success, the undefined value otherwise. If
2752the C<open> involved a pipe, the return value happens to be the pid of
2753the subprocess.
cb1a09d0 2754
ed53a2bb
JH
2755If you're running Perl on a system that distinguishes between text
2756files and binary files, then you should check out L</binmode> for tips
2757for dealing with this. The key distinction between systems that need
2758C<binmode> and those that don't is their text file formats. Systems
2759like Unix, MacOS, and Plan9, which delimit lines with a single
2760character, and which encode that character in C as C<"\n">, do not
2761need C<binmode>. The rest need it.
cb1a09d0 2762
ed53a2bb
JH
2763In the three argument form MODE may also contain a list of IO "layers"
2764(see L<open> and L<PerlIO> for more details) to be applied to the
2765handle. This can be used to achieve the effect of C<binmode> as well
2766as more complex behaviours.
68bd7414 2767
fb73857a 2768When opening a file, it's usually a bad idea to continue normal execution
19799a22
GS
2769if the request failed, so C<open> is frequently used in connection with
2770C<die>. Even if C<die> won't do what you want (say, in a CGI script,
fb73857a 2771where you want to make a nicely formatted error message (but there are
5a964f20 2772modules that can help with that problem)) you should always check
19799a22 2773the return value from opening a file. The infrequent exception is when
fb73857a 2774working with an unopened filehandle is actually what you want to do.
2775
ed53a2bb
JH
2776As a special case the 3 arg form with a read/write mode and the third
2777argument being C<undef>:
b76cc8ba
NIS
2778
2779 open(TMP, "+>", undef) or die ...
2780
2781opens a filehandle to an anonymous temporary file.
2782
ba964c95
T
2783File handles can be opened to "in memory" files held in Perl scalars via:
2784
2785 open($fh,'>', \$variable) || ..
2786
cb1a09d0 2787Examples:
a0d0e21e
LW
2788
2789 $ARTICLE = 100;
2790 open ARTICLE or die "Can't find article $ARTICLE: $!\n";
2791 while (<ARTICLE>) {...
2792
6170680b 2793 open(LOG, '>>/usr/spool/news/twitlog'); # (log is reserved)
fb73857a 2794 # if the open fails, output is discarded
a0d0e21e 2795
6170680b 2796 open(DBASE, '+<', 'dbase.mine') # open for update
fb73857a 2797 or die "Can't open 'dbase.mine' for update: $!";
cb1a09d0 2798
6170680b
IZ
2799 open(DBASE, '+<dbase.mine') # ditto
2800 or die "Can't open 'dbase.mine' for update: $!";
2801
2802 open(ARTICLE, '-|', "caesar <$article") # decrypt article
fb73857a 2803 or die "Can't start caesar: $!";
a0d0e21e 2804
6170680b
IZ
2805 open(ARTICLE, "caesar <$article |") # ditto
2806 or die "Can't start caesar: $!";
2807
2808 open(EXTRACT, "|sort >/tmp/Tmp$$") # $$ is our process id
fb73857a 2809 or die "Can't start sort: $!";
a0d0e21e 2810
ba964c95
T
2811 # in memory files
2812 open(MEMORY,'>', \$var)
2813 or die "Can't open memory file: $!";
2814 print MEMORY "foo!\n"; # output will end up in $var
2815
a0d0e21e
LW
2816 # process argument list of files along with any includes
2817
2818 foreach $file (@ARGV) {
2819 process($file, 'fh00');
2820 }
2821
2822 sub process {
5a964f20 2823 my($filename, $input) = @_;
a0d0e21e
LW
2824 $input++; # this is a string increment
2825 unless (open($input, $filename)) {
2826 print STDERR "Can't open $filename: $!\n";
2827 return;
2828 }
2829
5a964f20 2830 local $_;
a0d0e21e
LW
2831 while (<$input>) { # note use of indirection
2832 if (/^#include "(.*)"/) {
2833 process($1, $input);
2834 next;
2835 }
5a964f20 2836 #... # whatever
a0d0e21e
LW
2837 }
2838 }
2839
2840You may also, in the Bourne shell tradition, specify an EXPR beginning
61eff3bc 2841with C<< '>&' >>, in which case the rest of the string is interpreted as the
5a964f20 2842name of a filehandle (or file descriptor, if numeric) to be
61eff3bc
JH
2843duped and opened. You may use C<&> after C<< > >>, C<<< >> >>>,
2844C<< < >>, C<< +> >>, C<<< +>> >>>, and C<< +< >>. The
a0d0e21e 2845mode you specify should match the mode of the original filehandle.
184e9718 2846(Duping a filehandle does not take into account any existing contents of
9124316e 2847IO buffers.) If you use the 3 arg form then you can pass either a number,
b76cc8ba 2848the name of a filehandle or the normal "reference to a glob".
6170680b 2849
a0d0e21e
LW
2850Here is a script that saves, redirects, and restores STDOUT and
2851STDERR:
2852
2853 #!/usr/bin/perl
b76cc8ba 2854 open(my $oldout, ">&", \*STDOUT);
5a964f20 2855 open(OLDERR, ">&STDERR");
a0d0e21e 2856
6170680b
IZ
2857 open(STDOUT, '>', "foo.out") || die "Can't redirect stdout";
2858 open(STDERR, ">&STDOUT") || die "Can't dup stdout";
a0d0e21e
LW
2859
2860 select(STDERR); $| = 1; # make unbuffered
2861 select(STDOUT); $| = 1; # make unbuffered
2862
2863 print STDOUT "stdout 1\n"; # this works for
2864 print STDERR "stderr 1\n"; # subprocesses too
2865
2866 close(STDOUT);
2867 close(STDERR);
2868
5a964f20
TC
2869 open(STDOUT, ">&OLDOUT");
2870 open(STDERR, ">&OLDERR");
a0d0e21e
LW
2871
2872 print STDOUT "stdout 2\n";
2873 print STDERR "stderr 2\n";
2874
df632fdf
JH
2875If you specify C<< '<&=N' >>, where C<N> is a number, then Perl will
2876do an equivalent of C's C<fdopen> of that file descriptor; this is
2877more parsimonious of file descriptors. For example:
a0d0e21e
LW
2878
2879 open(FILEHANDLE, "<&=$fd")
df632fdf 2880
b76cc8ba 2881or
df632fdf 2882
b76cc8ba 2883 open(FILEHANDLE, "<&=", $fd)
a0d0e21e 2884
df632fdf
JH
2885Note that if Perl is using the standard C libraries' fdopen() then on
2886many UNIX systems, fdopen() is known to fail when file descriptors
4af147f6 2887exceed a certain value, typically 255. If you need more file
b76cc8ba 2888descriptors than that, consider rebuilding Perl to use the C<PerlIO>.
4af147f6 2889
df632fdf
JH
2890You can see whether Perl has been compiled with PerlIO or not by
2891running C<perl -V> and looking for C<useperlio=> line. If C<useperlio>
2892is C<define>, you have PerlIO, otherwise you don't.
2893
6170680b
IZ
2894If you open a pipe on the command C<'-'>, i.e., either C<'|-'> or C<'-|'>
2895with 2-arguments (or 1-argument) form of open(), then
a0d0e21e 2896there is an implicit fork done, and the return value of open is the pid
7660c0ab 2897of the child within the parent process, and C<0> within the child
184e9718 2898process. (Use C<defined($pid)> to determine whether the open was successful.)
a0d0e21e
LW
2899The filehandle behaves normally for the parent, but i/o to that
2900filehandle is piped from/to the STDOUT/STDIN of the child process.
2901In the child process the filehandle isn't opened--i/o happens from/to
2902the new STDOUT or STDIN. Typically this is used like the normal
2903piped open when you want to exercise more control over just how the
2904pipe command gets executed, such as when you are running setuid, and
54310121 2905don't want to have to scan shell commands for metacharacters.
6170680b 2906The following triples are more or less equivalent:
a0d0e21e
LW
2907
2908 open(FOO, "|tr '[a-z]' '[A-Z]'");
6170680b
IZ
2909 open(FOO, '|-', "tr '[a-z]' '[A-Z]'");
2910 open(FOO, '|-') || exec 'tr', '[a-z]', '[A-Z]';
b76cc8ba 2911 open(FOO, '|-', "tr", '[a-z]', '[A-Z]');
a0d0e21e
LW
2912
2913 open(FOO, "cat -n '$file'|");
6170680b
IZ
2914 open(FOO, '-|', "cat -n '$file'");
2915 open(FOO, '-|') || exec 'cat', '-n', $file;
b76cc8ba
NIS
2916 open(FOO, '-|', "cat", '-n', $file);
2917
2918The last example in each block shows the pipe as "list form", which is
2919not yet supported on all platforms.
a0d0e21e 2920
4633a7c4
LW
2921See L<perlipc/"Safe Pipe Opens"> for more examples of this.
2922
0f897271
GS
2923Beginning with v5.6.0, Perl will attempt to flush all files opened for
2924output before any operation that may do a fork, but this may not be
2925supported on some platforms (see L<perlport>). To be safe, you may need
2926to set C<$|> ($AUTOFLUSH in English) or call the C<autoflush()> method
2927of C<IO::Handle> on any open handles.
2928
ed53a2bb
JH
2929On systems that support a close-on-exec flag on files, the flag will
2930be set for the newly opened file descriptor as determined by the value
2931of $^F. See L<perlvar/$^F>.
a0d0e21e 2932
0dccf244
CS
2933Closing any piped filehandle causes the parent process to wait for the
2934child to finish, and returns the status value in C<$?>.
2935
ed53a2bb
JH
2936The filename passed to 2-argument (or 1-argument) form of open() will
2937have leading and trailing whitespace deleted, and the normal
2938redirection characters honored. This property, known as "magic open",
5a964f20 2939can often be used to good effect. A user could specify a filename of
7660c0ab 2940F<"rsh cat file |">, or you could change certain filenames as needed:
5a964f20
TC
2941
2942 $filename =~ s/(.*\.gz)\s*$/gzip -dc < $1|/;
2943 open(FH, $filename) or die "Can't open $filename: $!";
2944
6170680b
IZ
2945Use 3-argument form to open a file with arbitrary weird characters in it,
2946
2947 open(FOO, '<', $file);
2948
2949otherwise it's necessary to protect any leading and trailing whitespace:
5a964f20
TC
2950
2951 $file =~ s#^(\s)#./$1#;
2952 open(FOO, "< $file\0");
2953
a31a806a 2954(this may not work on some bizarre filesystems). One should
106325ad 2955conscientiously choose between the I<magic> and 3-arguments form
6170680b
IZ
2956of open():
2957
2958 open IN, $ARGV[0];
2959
2960will allow the user to specify an argument of the form C<"rsh cat file |">,
2961but will not work on a filename which happens to have a trailing space, while
2962
2963 open IN, '<', $ARGV[0];
2964
2965will have exactly the opposite restrictions.
2966
19799a22 2967If you want a "real" C C<open> (see L<open(2)> on your system), then you
6170680b
IZ
2968should use the C<sysopen> function, which involves no such magic (but
2969may use subtly different filemodes than Perl open(), which is mapped
2970to C fopen()). This is
5a964f20
TC
2971another way to protect your filenames from interpretation. For example:
2972
2973 use IO::Handle;
2974 sysopen(HANDLE, $path, O_RDWR|O_CREAT|O_EXCL)
2975 or die "sysopen $path: $!";
2976 $oldfh = select(HANDLE); $| = 1; select($oldfh);
38762f02 2977 print HANDLE "stuff $$\n";
5a964f20
TC
2978 seek(HANDLE, 0, 0);
2979 print "File contains: ", <HANDLE>;
2980
7660c0ab
A
2981Using the constructor from the C<IO::Handle> package (or one of its
2982subclasses, such as C<IO::File> or C<IO::Socket>), you can generate anonymous
5a964f20
TC
2983filehandles that have the scope of whatever variables hold references to
2984them, and automatically close whenever and however you leave that scope:
c07a80fd 2985
5f05dabc 2986 use IO::File;
5a964f20 2987 #...
c07a80fd 2988 sub read_myfile_munged {
2989 my $ALL = shift;
5f05dabc 2990 my $handle = new IO::File;
c07a80fd 2991 open($handle, "myfile") or die "myfile: $!";
2992 $first = <$handle>
2993 or return (); # Automatically closed here.
2994 mung $first or die "mung failed"; # Or here.
2995 return $first, <$handle> if $ALL; # Or here.
2996 $first; # Or here.
2997 }
2998
b687b08b 2999See L</seek> for some details about mixing reading and writing.
a0d0e21e
LW
3000
3001=item opendir DIRHANDLE,EXPR
3002
19799a22
GS
3003Opens a directory named EXPR for processing by C<readdir>, C<telldir>,
3004C<seekdir>, C<rewinddir>, and C<closedir>. Returns true if successful.
a0d0e21e
LW
3005DIRHANDLEs have their own namespace separate from FILEHANDLEs.
3006
3007=item ord EXPR
3008
54310121 3009=item ord
bbce6d69 3010
121910a4
JH
3011Returns the numeric (the native 8-bit encoding, like ASCII or EBCDIC,
3012or Unicode) value of the first character of EXPR. If EXPR is omitted,
3013uses C<$_>.
3014
3015For the reverse, see L</chr>.
3016See L<perlunicode> and L<encoding> for more about Unicode.
a0d0e21e 3017
77ca0c92
LW
3018=item our EXPR
3019
9969eac4
BS
3020=item our EXPR : ATTRIBUTES
3021
77ca0c92
LW
3022An C<our> declares the listed variables to be valid globals within
3023the enclosing block, file, or C<eval>. That is, it has the same
3024scoping rules as a "my" declaration, but does not create a local
3025variable. If more than one value is listed, the list must be placed
3026in parentheses. The C<our> declaration has no semantic effect unless
3027"use strict vars" is in effect, in which case it lets you use the
3028declared global variable without qualifying it with a package name.
3029(But only within the lexical scope of the C<our> declaration. In this
3030it differs from "use vars", which is package scoped.)
3031
f472eb5c
GS
3032An C<our> declaration declares a global variable that will be visible
3033across its entire lexical scope, even across package boundaries. The
3034package in which the variable is entered is determined at the point
3035of the declaration, not at the point of use. This means the following
3036behavior holds:
3037
3038 package Foo;
3039 our $bar; # declares $Foo::bar for rest of lexical scope
3040 $bar = 20;
3041
3042 package Bar;
3043 print $bar; # prints 20
3044
3045Multiple C<our> declarations in the same lexical scope are allowed
3046if they are in different packages. If they happened to be in the same
3047package, Perl will emit warnings if you have asked for them.
3048
3049 use warnings;
3050 package Foo;
3051 our $bar; # declares $Foo::bar for rest of lexical scope
3052 $bar = 20;
3053
3054 package Bar;
3055 our $bar = 30; # declares $Bar::bar for rest of lexical scope
3056 print $bar; # prints 30
3057
3058 our $bar; # emits warning
3059
9969eac4
BS
3060An C<our> declaration may also have a list of attributes associated
3061with it. B<WARNING>: This is an experimental feature that may be
3062changed or removed in future releases of Perl. It should not be
3063relied upon.
3064
51d2bbcc 3065The only currently recognized attribute is C<unique> which indicates
9969eac4
BS
3066that a single copy of the global is to be used by all interpreters
3067should the program happen to be running in a multi-interpreter
3068environment. (The default behaviour would be for each interpreter to
3069have its own copy of the global.) In such an environment, this
3070attribute also has the effect of making the global readonly.
3071Examples:
3072
51d2bbcc
JH
3073 our @EXPORT : unique = qw(foo);
3074 our %EXPORT_TAGS : unique = (bar => [qw(aa bb cc)]);
3075 our $VERSION : unique = "1.00";
9969eac4
BS
3076
3077Multi-interpreter environments can come to being either through the
3078fork() emulation on Windows platforms, or by embedding perl in a
51d2bbcc 3079multi-threaded application. The C<unique> attribute does nothing in
9969eac4
BS
3080all other environments.
3081
a0d0e21e
LW
3082=item pack TEMPLATE,LIST
3083
2b6c5635
GS
3084Takes a LIST of values and converts it into a string using the rules
3085given by the TEMPLATE. The resulting string is the concatenation of
3086the converted values. Typically, each converted value looks
3087like its machine-level representation. For example, on 32-bit machines
3088a converted integer may be represented by a sequence of 4 bytes.
3089
3090The TEMPLATE is a
a0d0e21e
LW
3091sequence of characters that give the order and type of values, as
3092follows:
3093
5a929a98 3094 a A string with arbitrary binary data, will be null padded.
121910a4
JH
3095 A A text (ASCII) string, will be space padded.
3096 Z A null terminated (ASCIZ) string, will be null padded.
5a929a98 3097
2b6c5635
GS
3098 b A bit string (ascending bit order inside each byte, like vec()).
3099 B A bit string (descending bit order inside each byte).
a0d0e21e
LW
3100 h A hex string (low nybble first).
3101 H A hex string (high nybble first).
3102
3103 c A signed char value.
a0ed51b3 3104 C An unsigned char value. Only does bytes. See U for Unicode.
96e4d5b1 3105
a0d0e21e
LW
3106 s A signed short value.
3107 S An unsigned short value.
96e4d5b1 3108 (This 'short' is _exactly_ 16 bits, which may differ from
851646ae
JH
3109 what a local C compiler calls 'short'. If you want
3110 native-length shorts, use the '!' suffix.)
96e4d5b1 3111
a0d0e21e
LW
3112 i A signed integer value.
3113 I An unsigned integer value.
19799a22 3114 (This 'integer' is _at_least_ 32 bits wide. Its exact
f86cebdf
GS
3115 size depends on what a local C compiler calls 'int',
3116 and may even be larger than the 'long' described in
3117 the next item.)
96e4d5b1 3118
a0d0e21e
LW
3119 l A signed long value.
3120 L An unsigned long value.
96e4d5b1 3121 (This 'long' is _exactly_ 32 bits, which may differ from
851646ae
JH
3122 what a local C compiler calls 'long'. If you want
3123 native-length longs, use the '!' suffix.)
a0d0e21e 3124
5d11dd56
MG
3125 n An unsigned short in "network" (big-endian) order.
3126 N An unsigned long in "network" (big-endian) order.
3127 v An unsigned short in "VAX" (little-endian) order.
3128 V An unsigned long in "VAX" (little-endian) order.
96e4d5b1 3129 (These 'shorts' and 'longs' are _exactly_ 16 bits and
3130 _exactly_ 32 bits, respectively.)
a0d0e21e 3131
dae0da7a
JH
3132 q A signed quad (64-bit) value.
3133 Q An unsigned quad value.
851646ae
JH
3134 (Quads are available only if your system supports 64-bit
3135 integer values _and_ if Perl has been compiled to support those.
dae0da7a
JH
3136 Causes a fatal error otherwise.)
3137
a0d0e21e
LW
3138 f A single-precision float in the native format.
3139 d A double-precision float in the native format.
3140
3141 p A pointer to a null-terminated string.
3142 P A pointer to a structure (fixed-length string).
3143
3144 u A uuencoded string.
ad0029c4
JH
3145 U A Unicode character number. Encodes to UTF-8 internally
3146 (or UTF-EBCDIC in EBCDIC platforms).
a0d0e21e 3147
96e4d5b1 3148 w A BER compressed integer. Its bytes represent an unsigned
f86cebdf
GS
3149 integer in base 128, most significant digit first, with as
3150 few digits as possible. Bit eight (the high bit) is set
3151 on each byte except the last.
def98dd4 3152
a0d0e21e
LW
3153 x A null byte.
3154 X Back up a byte.
3155 @ Null fill to absolute position.
3156
5a929a98
VU
3157The following rules apply:
3158
3159=over 8
3160
3161=item *
3162
5a964f20 3163Each letter may optionally be followed by a number giving a repeat
951ba7fe
GS
3164count. With all types except C<a>, C<A>, C<Z>, C<b>, C<B>, C<h>,
3165C<H>, and C<P> the pack function will gobble up that many values from
5a929a98 3166the LIST. A C<*> for the repeat count means to use however many items are
951ba7fe
GS
3167left, except for C<@>, C<x>, C<X>, where it is equivalent
3168to C<0>, and C<u>, where it is equivalent to 1 (or 45, what is the
2b6c5635
GS
3169same).
3170
951ba7fe 3171When used with C<Z>, C<*> results in the addition of a trailing null
2b6c5635
GS
3172byte (so the packed result will be one longer than the byte C<length>
3173of the item).
3174
951ba7fe 3175The repeat count for C<u> is interpreted as the maximal number of bytes
2b6c5635 3176to encode per line of output, with 0 and 1 replaced by 45.
5a929a98
VU
3177
3178=item *
3179
951ba7fe 3180The C<a>, C<A>, and C<Z> types gobble just one value, but pack it as a
5a929a98 3181string of length count, padding with nulls or spaces as necessary. When
951ba7fe
GS
3182unpacking, C<A> strips trailing spaces and nulls, C<Z> strips everything
3183after the first null, and C<a> returns data verbatim. When packing,
3184C<a>, and C<Z> are equivalent.
2b6c5635
GS
3185
3186If the value-to-pack is too long, it is truncated. If too long and an
951ba7fe
GS
3187explicit count is provided, C<Z> packs only C<$count-1> bytes, followed
3188by a null byte. Thus C<Z> always packs a trailing null byte under
2b6c5635 3189all circumstances.
5a929a98
VU
3190
3191=item *
3192
951ba7fe 3193Likewise, the C<b> and C<B> fields pack a string that many bits long.
c73032f5
IZ
3194Each byte of the input field of pack() generates 1 bit of the result.
3195Each result bit is based on the least-significant bit of the corresponding
3196input byte, i.e., on C<ord($byte)%2>. In particular, bytes C<"0"> and
3197C<"1"> generate bits 0 and 1, as do bytes C<"\0"> and C<"\1">.
3198
3199Starting from the beginning of the input string of pack(), each 8-tuple
951ba7fe 3200of bytes is converted to 1 byte of output. With format C<b>
c73032f5 3201the first byte of the 8-tuple determines the least-significant bit of a
951ba7fe 3202byte, and with format C<B> it determines the most-significant bit of
c73032f5
IZ
3203a byte.
3204
3205If the length of the input string is not exactly divisible by 8, the
3206remainder is packed as if the input string were padded by null bytes
3207at the end. Similarly, during unpack()ing the "extra" bits are ignored.
3208
3209If the input string of pack() is longer than needed, extra bytes are ignored.
2b6c5635
GS
3210A C<*> for the repeat count of pack() means to use all the bytes of
3211the input field. On unpack()ing the bits are converted to a string
3212of C<"0">s and C<"1">s.
5a929a98
VU
3213
3214=item *
3215
951ba7fe 3216The C<h> and C<H> fields pack a string that many nybbles (4-bit groups,
851646ae 3217representable as hexadecimal digits, 0-9a-f) long.
5a929a98 3218
c73032f5
IZ
3219Each byte of the input field of pack() generates 4 bits of the result.
3220For non-alphabetical bytes the result is based on the 4 least-significant
3221bits of the input byte, i.e., on C<ord($byte)%16>. In particular,
3222bytes C<"0"> and C<"1"> generate nybbles 0 and 1, as do bytes
3223C<"\0"> and C<"\1">. For bytes C<"a".."f"> and C<"A".."F"> the result
3224is compatible with the usual hexadecimal digits, so that C<"a"> and
3225C<"A"> both generate the nybble C<0xa==10>. The result for bytes
3226C<"g".."z"> and C<"G".."Z"> is not well-defined.
3227
3228Starting from the beginning of the input string of pack(), each pair
951ba7fe 3229of bytes is converted to 1 byte of output. With format C<h> the
c73032f5 3230first byte of the pair determines the least-significant nybble of the
951ba7fe 3231output byte, and with format C<H> it determines the most-significant
c73032f5
IZ
3232nybble.
3233
3234If the length of the input string is not even, it behaves as if padded
3235by a null byte at the end. Similarly, during unpack()ing the "extra"
3236nybbles are ignored.
3237
3238If the input string of pack() is longer than needed, extra bytes are ignored.
3239A C<*> for the repeat count of pack() means to use all the bytes of
3240the input field. On unpack()ing the bits are converted to a string
3241of hexadecimal digits.
3242
5a929a98
VU
3243=item *
3244
951ba7fe 3245The C<p> type packs a pointer to a null-terminated string. You are
5a929a98
VU
3246responsible for ensuring the string is not a temporary value (which can
3247potentially get deallocated before you get around to using the packed result).
951ba7fe
GS
3248The C<P> type packs a pointer to a structure of the size indicated by the
3249length. A NULL pointer is created if the corresponding value for C<p> or
3250C<P> is C<undef>, similarly for unpack().
5a929a98
VU
3251
3252=item *
3253
951ba7fe
GS
3254The C</> template character allows packing and unpacking of strings where
3255the packed structure contains a byte count followed by the string itself.
17f4a12d 3256You write I<length-item>C</>I<string-item>.
43192e07
IP
3257
3258The I<length-item> can be any C<pack> template letter,
3259and describes how the length value is packed.
3260The ones likely to be of most use are integer-packing ones like
951ba7fe
GS
3261C<n> (for Java strings), C<w> (for ASN.1 or SNMP)
3262and C<N> (for Sun XDR).
43192e07
IP
3263
3264The I<string-item> must, at present, be C<"A*">, C<"a*"> or C<"Z*">.
3265For C<unpack> the length of the string is obtained from the I<length-item>,
3266but if you put in the '*' it will be ignored.
3267
17f4a12d
IZ
3268 unpack 'C/a', "\04Gurusamy"; gives 'Guru'
3269 unpack 'a3/A* A*', '007 Bond J '; gives (' Bond','J')
3270 pack 'n/a* w/a*','hello,','world'; gives "\000\006hello,\005world"
43192e07
IP
3271
3272The I<length-item> is not returned explicitly from C<unpack>.
3273
951ba7fe
GS
3274Adding a count to the I<length-item> letter is unlikely to do anything
3275useful, unless that letter is C<A>, C<a> or C<Z>. Packing with a
3276I<length-item> of C<a> or C<Z> may introduce C<"\000"> characters,
43192e07
IP
3277which Perl does not regard as legal in numeric strings.
3278
3279=item *
3280
951ba7fe
GS
3281The integer types C<s>, C<S>, C<l>, and C<L> may be
3282immediately followed by a C<!> suffix to signify native shorts or
3283longs--as you can see from above for example a bare C<l> does mean
851646ae
JH
3284exactly 32 bits, the native C<long> (as seen by the local C compiler)
3285may be larger. This is an issue mainly in 64-bit platforms. You can
951ba7fe 3286see whether using C<!> makes any difference by
726ea183 3287
4d0c1c44
GS
3288 print length(pack("s")), " ", length(pack("s!")), "\n";
3289 print length(pack("l")), " ", length(pack("l!")), "\n";
ef54e1a4 3290
951ba7fe
GS
3291C<i!> and C<I!> also work but only because of completeness;
3292they are identical to C<i> and C<I>.
ef54e1a4 3293
19799a22
GS
3294The actual sizes (in bytes) of native shorts, ints, longs, and long
3295longs on the platform where Perl was built are also available via
3296L<Config>:
3297
3298 use Config;
3299 print $Config{shortsize}, "\n";
3300 print $Config{intsize}, "\n";
3301 print $Config{longsize}, "\n";
3302 print $Config{longlongsize}, "\n";
ef54e1a4 3303
5074e145 3304(The C<$Config{longlongsize}> will be undefine if your system does
b76cc8ba 3305not support long longs.)
851646ae 3306
ef54e1a4
JH
3307=item *
3308
951ba7fe 3309The integer formats C<s>, C<S>, C<i>, C<I>, C<l>, and C<L>
ef54e1a4
JH
3310are inherently non-portable between processors and operating systems
3311because they obey the native byteorder and endianness. For example a
82e239e7 33124-byte integer 0x12345678 (305419896 decimal) would be ordered natively
ef54e1a4 3313(arranged in and handled by the CPU registers) into bytes as
61eff3bc 3314
b35e152f
JJ
3315 0x12 0x34 0x56 0x78 # big-endian
3316 0x78 0x56 0x34 0x12 # little-endian
61eff3bc 3317
b84d4f81
JH
3318Basically, the Intel and VAX CPUs are little-endian, while everybody
3319else, for example Motorola m68k/88k, PPC, Sparc, HP PA, Power, and
3320Cray are big-endian. Alpha and MIPS can be either: Digital/Compaq
82e239e7
JH
3321used/uses them in little-endian mode; SGI/Cray uses them in big-endian
3322mode.
719a3cf5 3323
19799a22 3324The names `big-endian' and `little-endian' are comic references to
ef54e1a4
JH
3325the classic "Gulliver's Travels" (via the paper "On Holy Wars and a
3326Plea for Peace" by Danny Cohen, USC/ISI IEN 137, April 1, 1980) and
19799a22 3327the egg-eating habits of the Lilliputians.
61eff3bc 3328
140cb37e 3329Some systems may have even weirder byte orders such as
61eff3bc 3330
ef54e1a4
JH
3331 0x56 0x78 0x12 0x34
3332 0x34 0x12 0x78 0x56
61eff3bc 3333
ef54e1a4
JH
3334You can see your system's preference with
3335
3336 print join(" ", map { sprintf "%#02x", $_ }
3337 unpack("C*",pack("L",0x12345678))), "\n";
3338
d99ad34e 3339The byteorder on the platform where Perl was built is also available
726ea183 3340via L<Config>:
ef54e1a4
JH
3341
3342 use Config;
3343 print $Config{byteorder}, "\n";
3344
d99ad34e
JH
3345Byteorders C<'1234'> and C<'12345678'> are little-endian, C<'4321'>
3346and C<'87654321'> are big-endian.
719a3cf5 3347
951ba7fe 3348If you want portable packed integers use the formats C<n>, C<N>,
82e239e7 3349C<v>, and C<V>, their byte endianness and size are known.
851646ae 3350See also L<perlport>.
ef54e1a4
JH
3351
3352=item *
3353
5a929a98
VU
3354Real numbers (floats and doubles) are in the native machine format only;
3355due to the multiplicity of floating formats around, and the lack of a
3356standard "network" representation, no facility for interchange has been
3357made. This means that packed floating point data written on one machine
3358may not be readable on another - even if both use IEEE floating point
3359arithmetic (as the endian-ness of the memory representation is not part
851646ae 3360of the IEEE spec). See also L<perlport>.
5a929a98
VU
3361
3362Note that Perl uses doubles internally for all numeric calculation, and
3363converting from double into float and thence back to double again will
3364lose precision (i.e., C<unpack("f", pack("f", $foo)>) will not in general
19799a22 3365equal $foo).
5a929a98 3366
851646ae
JH
3367=item *
3368
036b4402
GS
3369If the pattern begins with a C<U>, the resulting string will be treated
3370as Unicode-encoded. You can force UTF8 encoding on in a string with an
3371initial C<U0>, and the bytes that follow will be interpreted as Unicode
3372characters. If you don't want this to happen, you can begin your pattern
3373with C<C0> (or anything else) to force Perl not to UTF8 encode your
3374string, and then follow this with a C<U*> somewhere in your pattern.
3375
3376=item *
3377
851646ae 3378You must yourself do any alignment or padding by inserting for example
9ccd05c0
JH
3379enough C<'x'>es while packing. There is no way to pack() and unpack()
3380could know where the bytes are going to or coming from. Therefore
3381C<pack> (and C<unpack>) handle their output and input as flat
3382sequences of bytes.
851646ae 3383
17f4a12d
IZ
3384=item *
3385
3386A comment in a TEMPLATE starts with C<#> and goes to the end of line.
3387
2b6c5635
GS
3388=item *
3389
3390If TEMPLATE requires more arguments to pack() than actually given, pack()
3391assumes additional C<""> arguments. If TEMPLATE requires less arguments
3392to pack() than actually given, extra arguments are ignored.
3393
5a929a98 3394=back
a0d0e21e
LW
3395
3396Examples:
3397
a0ed51b3 3398 $foo = pack("CCCC",65,66,67,68);
a0d0e21e 3399 # foo eq "ABCD"
a0ed51b3 3400 $foo = pack("C4",65,66,67,68);
a0d0e21e 3401 # same thing
a0ed51b3
LW
3402 $foo = pack("U4",0x24b6,0x24b7,0x24b8,0x24b9);
3403 # same thing with Unicode circled letters
a0d0e21e
LW
3404
3405 $foo = pack("ccxxcc",65,66,67,68);
3406 # foo eq "AB\0\0CD"
3407
9ccd05c0
JH
3408 # note: the above examples featuring "C" and "c" are true
3409 # only on ASCII and ASCII-derived systems such as ISO Latin 1
3410 # and UTF-8. In EBCDIC the first example would be
3411 # $foo = pack("CCCC",193,194,195,196);
3412
a0d0e21e
LW
3413 $foo = pack("s2",1,2);
3414 # "\1\0\2\0" on little-endian
3415 # "\0\1\0\2" on big-endian
3416
3417 $foo = pack("a4","abcd","x","y","z");
3418 # "abcd"
3419
3420 $foo = pack("aaaa","abcd","x","y","z");
3421 # "axyz"
3422
3423 $foo = pack("a14","abcdefg");
3424 # "abcdefg\0\0\0\0\0\0\0"
3425
3426 $foo = pack("i9pl", gmtime);
3427 # a real struct tm (on my system anyway)
3428
5a929a98
VU
3429 $utmp_template = "Z8 Z8 Z16 L";
3430 $utmp = pack($utmp_template, @utmp1);
3431 # a struct utmp (BSDish)
3432
3433 @utmp2 = unpack($utmp_template, $utmp);
3434 # "@utmp1" eq "@utmp2"
3435
a0d0e21e
LW
3436 sub bintodec {
3437 unpack("N", pack("B32", substr("0" x 32 . shift, -32)));
3438 }
3439
851646ae
JH
3440 $foo = pack('sx2l', 12, 34);
3441 # short 12, two zero bytes padding, long 34
3442 $bar = pack('s@4l', 12, 34);
3443 # short 12, zero fill to position 4, long 34
3444 # $foo eq $bar
3445
5a929a98 3446The same template may generally also be used in unpack().
a0d0e21e 3447
cb1a09d0
AD
3448=item package NAMESPACE
3449
b76cc8ba 3450=item package
d6217f1e 3451
cb1a09d0 3452Declares the compilation unit as being in the given namespace. The scope
2b5ab1e7 3453of the package declaration is from the declaration itself through the end
19799a22 3454of the enclosing block, file, or eval (the same as the C<my> operator).
2b5ab1e7
TC
3455All further unqualified dynamic identifiers will be in this namespace.
3456A package statement affects only dynamic variables--including those
19799a22
GS
3457you've used C<local> on--but I<not> lexical variables, which are created
3458with C<my>. Typically it would be the first declaration in a file to
2b5ab1e7
TC
3459be included by the C<require> or C<use> operator. You can switch into a
3460package in more than one place; it merely influences which symbol table
3461is used by the compiler for the rest of that block. You can refer to
3462variables and filehandles in other packages by prefixing the identifier
3463with the package name and a double colon: C<$Package::Variable>.
3464If the package name is null, the C<main> package as assumed. That is,
3465C<$::sail> is equivalent to C<$main::sail> (as well as to C<$main'sail>,
3466still seen in older code).
cb1a09d0 3467
5a964f20 3468If NAMESPACE is omitted, then there is no current package, and all
f2c0fa37
RH
3469identifiers must be fully qualified or lexicals. However, you are
3470strongly advised not to make use of this feature. Its use can cause
3471unexpected behaviour, even crashing some versions of Perl. It is
3472deprecated, and will be removed from a future release.
5a964f20 3473
cb1a09d0
AD
3474See L<perlmod/"Packages"> for more information about packages, modules,
3475and classes. See L<perlsub> for other scoping issues.
3476
a0d0e21e
LW
3477=item pipe READHANDLE,WRITEHANDLE
3478
3479Opens a pair of connected pipes like the corresponding system call.
3480Note that if you set up a loop of piped processes, deadlock can occur
3481unless you are very careful. In addition, note that Perl's pipes use
9124316e 3482IO buffering, so you may need to set C<$|> to flush your WRITEHANDLE
a0d0e21e
LW
3483after each command, depending on the application.
3484
7e1af8bc 3485See L<IPC::Open2>, L<IPC::Open3>, and L<perlipc/"Bidirectional Communication">
4633a7c4
LW
3486for examples of such things.
3487
4771b018
GS
3488On systems that support a close-on-exec flag on files, the flag will be set
3489for the newly opened file descriptors as determined by the value of $^F.
3490See L<perlvar/$^F>.
3491
a0d0e21e
LW
3492=item pop ARRAY
3493
54310121 3494=item pop
28757baa 3495
a0d0e21e 3496Pops and returns the last value of the array, shortening the array by
19799a22 3497one element. Has an effect similar to
a0d0e21e 3498
19799a22 3499 $ARRAY[$#ARRAY--]
a0d0e21e 3500
19799a22
GS
3501If there are no elements in the array, returns the undefined value
3502(although this may happen at other times as well). If ARRAY is
3503omitted, pops the C<@ARGV> array in the main program, and the C<@_>
3504array in subroutines, just like C<shift>.
a0d0e21e
LW
3505
3506=item pos SCALAR
3507
54310121 3508=item pos
bbce6d69 3509
4633a7c4 3510Returns the offset of where the last C<m//g> search left off for the variable
d6217f1e 3511in question (C<$_> is used when the variable is not specified). May be
44a8e56a 3512modified to change that offset. Such modification will also influence
3513the C<\G> zero-width assertion in regular expressions. See L<perlre> and
3514L<perlop>.
a0d0e21e
LW
3515
3516=item print FILEHANDLE LIST
3517
3518=item print LIST
3519
3520=item print
3521
19799a22
GS
3522Prints a string or a list of strings. Returns true if successful.
3523FILEHANDLE may be a scalar variable name, in which case the variable
3524contains the name of or a reference to the filehandle, thus introducing
3525one level of indirection. (NOTE: If FILEHANDLE is a variable and
3526the next token is a term, it may be misinterpreted as an operator
2b5ab1e7 3527unless you interpose a C<+> or put parentheses around the arguments.)
19799a22
GS
3528If FILEHANDLE is omitted, prints by default to standard output (or
3529to the last selected output channel--see L</select>). If LIST is
3530also omitted, prints C<$_> to the currently selected output channel.
3531To set the default output channel to something other than STDOUT
3532use the select operation. The current value of C<$,> (if any) is
3533printed between each LIST item. The current value of C<$\> (if
3534any) is printed after the entire LIST has been printed. Because
3535print takes a LIST, anything in the LIST is evaluated in list
3536context, and any subroutine that you call will have one or more of
3537its expressions evaluated in list context. Also be careful not to
3538follow the print keyword with a left parenthesis unless you want
3539the corresponding right parenthesis to terminate the arguments to
3540the print--interpose a C<+> or put parentheses around all the
3541arguments.
a0d0e21e 3542
4633a7c4 3543Note that if you're storing FILEHANDLES in an array or other expression,
da0045b7 3544you will have to use a block returning its value instead:
4633a7c4
LW
3545
3546 print { $files[$i] } "stuff\n";
3547 print { $OK ? STDOUT : STDERR } "stuff\n";
3548
5f05dabc 3549=item printf FILEHANDLE FORMAT, LIST
a0d0e21e 3550
5f05dabc 3551=item printf FORMAT, LIST
a0d0e21e 3552
7660c0ab 3553Equivalent to C<print FILEHANDLE sprintf(FORMAT, LIST)>, except that C<$\>
a3cb178b 3554(the output record separator) is not appended. The first argument
f39758bf
GJ
3555of the list will be interpreted as the C<printf> format. See C<sprintf>
3556for an explanation of the format argument. If C<use locale> is in effect,
3557the character used for the decimal point in formatted real numbers is
3558affected by the LC_NUMERIC locale. See L<perllocale>.
a0d0e21e 3559
19799a22
GS
3560Don't fall into the trap of using a C<printf> when a simple
3561C<print> would do. The C<print> is more efficient and less
28757baa 3562error prone.
3563
da0045b7 3564=item prototype FUNCTION
3565
3566Returns the prototype of a function as a string (or C<undef> if the
5f05dabc 3567function has no prototype). FUNCTION is a reference to, or the name of,
3568the function whose prototype you want to retrieve.
da0045b7 3569
2b5ab1e7
TC
3570If FUNCTION is a string starting with C<CORE::>, the rest is taken as a
3571name for Perl builtin. If the builtin is not I<overridable> (such as
ab4f32c2 3572C<qw//>) or its arguments cannot be expressed by a prototype (such as
19799a22 3573C<system>) returns C<undef> because the builtin does not really behave
2b5ab1e7
TC
3574like a Perl function. Otherwise, the string describing the equivalent
3575prototype is returned.
b6c543e3 3576
a0d0e21e
LW
3577=item push ARRAY,LIST
3578
3579Treats ARRAY as a stack, and pushes the values of LIST
3580onto the end of ARRAY. The length of ARRAY increases by the length of
3581LIST. Has the same effect as
3582
3583 for $value (LIST) {
3584 $ARRAY[++$#ARRAY] = $value;
3585 }
3586
3587but is more efficient. Returns the new number of elements in the array.
3588
3589=item q/STRING/
3590
3591=item qq/STRING/
3592
8782bef2
GB
3593=item qr/STRING/
3594
945c54fd 3595=item qx/STRING/
a0d0e21e
LW
3596
3597=item qw/STRING/
3598
4b6a7270 3599Generalized quotes. See L<perlop/"Regexp Quote-Like Operators">.
a0d0e21e
LW
3600
3601=item quotemeta EXPR
3602
54310121 3603=item quotemeta
bbce6d69 3604
36bbe248 3605Returns the value of EXPR with all non-"word"
a034a98d
DD
3606characters backslashed. (That is, all characters not matching
3607C</[A-Za-z_0-9]/> will be preceded by a backslash in the
3608returned string, regardless of any locale settings.)
3609This is the internal function implementing
7660c0ab 3610the C<\Q> escape in double-quoted strings.
a0d0e21e 3611
7660c0ab 3612If EXPR is omitted, uses C<$_>.
bbce6d69 3613
a0d0e21e
LW
3614=item rand EXPR
3615
3616=item rand
3617
7660c0ab 3618Returns a random fractional number greater than or equal to C<0> and less
3e3baf6d 3619than the value of EXPR. (EXPR should be positive.) If EXPR is
68bd7414 3620omitted, or a C<0>, the value C<1> is used. Automatically calls C<srand>
a720b353 3621unless C<srand> has already been called. See also C<srand>.
a0d0e21e 3622
6063ba18
WM
3623Apply C<int()> to the value returned by C<rand()> if you want random
3624integers instead of random fractional numbers. For example,
3625
3626 int(rand(10))
3627
3628returns a random integer between C<0> and C<9>, inclusive.
3629
2f9daede 3630(Note: If your rand function consistently returns numbers that are too
a0d0e21e 3631large or too small, then your version of Perl was probably compiled
2f9daede 3632with the wrong number of RANDBITS.)
a0d0e21e
LW
3633
3634=item read FILEHANDLE,SCALAR,LENGTH,OFFSET
3635
3636=item read FILEHANDLE,SCALAR,LENGTH
3637
9124316e
JH
3638Attempts to read LENGTH I<characters> of data into variable SCALAR
3639from the specified FILEHANDLE. Returns the number of characters
3640actually read, C<0> at end of file, or undef if there was an error.
3641SCALAR will be grown or shrunk to the length actually read. If SCALAR
3642needs growing, the new bytes will be zero bytes. An OFFSET may be
3643specified to place the read data into some other place in SCALAR than
3644the beginning. The call is actually implemented in terms of either
3645Perl's or system's fread() call. To get a true read(2) system call,
3646see C<sysread>.
3647
3648Note the I<characters>: depending on the status of the filehandle,
3649either (8-bit) bytes or characters are read. By default all
3650filehandles operate on bytes, but for example if the filehandle has
3651been opened with the C<:utf8> discipline (see L</open>, and the C<open>
3652pragma, L<open>), the I/O will operate on characters, not bytes.
a0d0e21e
LW
3653
3654=item readdir DIRHANDLE
3655
19799a22 3656Returns the next directory entry for a directory opened by C<opendir>.
5a964f20 3657If used in list context, returns all the rest of the entries in the
a0d0e21e 3658directory. If there are no more entries, returns an undefined value in
5a964f20 3659scalar context or a null list in list context.
a0d0e21e 3660
19799a22 3661If you're planning to filetest the return values out of a C<readdir>, you'd
5f05dabc 3662better prepend the directory in question. Otherwise, because we didn't
19799a22 3663C<chdir> there, it would have been testing the wrong file.
cb1a09d0
AD
3664
3665 opendir(DIR, $some_dir) || die "can't opendir $some_dir: $!";
3666 @dots = grep { /^\./ && -f "$some_dir/$_" } readdir(DIR);
3667 closedir DIR;
3668
84902520
TB
3669=item readline EXPR
3670
d4679214
JH
3671Reads from the filehandle whose typeglob is contained in EXPR. In scalar
3672context, each call reads and returns the next line, until end-of-file is
3673reached, whereupon the subsequent call returns undef. In list context,
3674reads until end-of-file is reached and returns a list of lines. Note that
3675the notion of "line" used here is however you may have defined it
3676with C<$/> or C<$INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR>). See L<perlvar/"$/">.
fbad3eb5 3677
2b5ab1e7 3678When C<$/> is set to C<undef>, when readline() is in scalar
449bc448
GS
3679context (i.e. file slurp mode), and when an empty file is read, it
3680returns C<''> the first time, followed by C<undef> subsequently.
fbad3eb5 3681
61eff3bc
JH
3682This is the internal function implementing the C<< <EXPR> >>
3683operator, but you can use it directly. The C<< <EXPR> >>
84902520
TB
3684operator is discussed in more detail in L<perlop/"I/O Operators">.
3685
5a964f20
TC
3686 $line = <STDIN>;
3687 $line = readline(*STDIN); # same thing
3688
a0d0e21e
LW
3689=item readlink EXPR
3690
54310121 3691=item readlink
bbce6d69 3692
a0d0e21e
LW
3693Returns the value of a symbolic link, if symbolic links are
3694implemented. If not, gives a fatal error. If there is some system
184e9718 3695error, returns the undefined value and sets C<$!> (errno). If EXPR is
7660c0ab 3696omitted, uses C<$_>.
a0d0e21e 3697
84902520
TB
3698=item readpipe EXPR
3699
5a964f20 3700EXPR is executed as a system command.
84902520
TB
3701The collected standard output of the command is returned.
3702In scalar context, it comes back as a single (potentially
3703multi-line) string. In list context, returns a list of lines
7660c0ab 3704(however you've defined lines with C<$/> or C<$INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR>).
84902520
TB
3705This is the internal function implementing the C<qx/EXPR/>
3706operator, but you can use it directly. The C<qx/EXPR/>
3707operator is discussed in more detail in L<perlop/"I/O Operators">.
3708
399388f4 3709=item recv SOCKET,SCALAR,LENGTH,FLAGS
a0d0e21e 3710
9124316e
JH
3711Receives a message on a socket. Attempts to receive LENGTH characters
3712of data into variable SCALAR from the specified SOCKET filehandle.
3713SCALAR will be grown or shrunk to the length actually read. Takes the
3714same flags as the system call of the same name. Returns the address
3715of the sender if SOCKET's protocol supports this; returns an empty
3716string otherwise. If there's an error, returns the undefined value.
3717This call is actually implemented in terms of recvfrom(2) system call.
3718See L<perlipc/"UDP: Message Passing"> for examples.
3719
3720Note the I<characters>: depending on the status of the socket, either
3721(8-bit) bytes or characters are received. By default all sockets
3722operate on bytes, but for example if the socket has been changed using
3723binmode() to operate with the C<:utf8> discipline (see the C<open>
3724pragma, L<open>), the I/O will operate on characters, not bytes.
a0d0e21e
LW
3725
3726=item redo LABEL
3727
3728=item redo
3729
3730The C<redo> command restarts the loop block without evaluating the
98293880 3731conditional again. The C<continue> block, if any, is not executed. If
a0d0e21e
LW
3732the LABEL is omitted, the command refers to the innermost enclosing
3733loop. This command is normally used by programs that want to lie to
3734themselves about what was just input:
3735
3736 # a simpleminded Pascal comment stripper
3737 # (warning: assumes no { or } in strings)
4633a7c4 3738 LINE: while (<STDIN>) {
a0d0e21e
LW
3739 while (s|({.*}.*){.*}|$1 |) {}
3740 s|{.*}| |;
3741 if (s|{.*| |) {
3742 $front = $_;
3743 while (<STDIN>) {
3744 if (/}/) { # end of comment?
5a964f20 3745 s|^|$front\{|;
4633a7c4 3746 redo LINE;
a0d0e21e
LW
3747 }
3748 }
3749 }
3750 print;
3751 }
3752
4968c1e4 3753C<redo> cannot be used to retry a block which returns a value such as
2b5ab1e7
TC
3754C<eval {}>, C<sub {}> or C<do {}>, and should not be used to exit
3755a grep() or map() operation.
4968c1e4 3756
6c1372ed
GS
3757Note that a block by itself is semantically identical to a loop
3758that executes once. Thus C<redo> inside such a block will effectively
3759turn it into a looping construct.
3760
98293880 3761See also L</continue> for an illustration of how C<last>, C<next>, and
1d2dff63
GS
3762C<redo> work.
3763
a0d0e21e
LW
3764=item ref EXPR
3765
54310121 3766=item ref
bbce6d69 3767
19799a22 3768Returns a true value if EXPR is a reference, false otherwise. If EXPR
7660c0ab 3769is not specified, C<$_> will be used. The value returned depends on the
bbce6d69 3770type of thing the reference is a reference to.
a0d0e21e
LW
3771Builtin types include:
3772
a0d0e21e
LW
3773 SCALAR
3774 ARRAY
3775 HASH
3776 CODE
19799a22 3777 REF
a0d0e21e 3778 GLOB
19799a22 3779 LVALUE
a0d0e21e 3780
54310121 3781If the referenced object has been blessed into a package, then that package
19799a22 3782name is returned instead. You can think of C<ref> as a C<typeof> operator.
a0d0e21e
LW
3783
3784 if (ref($r) eq "HASH") {
aa689395 3785 print "r is a reference to a hash.\n";
54310121 3786 }
2b5ab1e7 3787 unless (ref($r)) {
a0d0e21e 3788 print "r is not a reference at all.\n";
54310121 3789 }
2b5ab1e7
TC
3790 if (UNIVERSAL::isa($r, "HASH")) { # for subclassing
3791 print "r is a reference to something that isa hash.\n";
b76cc8ba 3792 }
a0d0e21e
LW
3793
3794See also L<perlref>.
3795
3796=item rename OLDNAME,NEWNAME
3797
19799a22
GS
3798Changes the name of a file; an existing file NEWNAME will be
3799clobbered. Returns true for success, false otherwise.
3800
2b5ab1e7
TC
3801Behavior of this function varies wildly depending on your system
3802implementation. For example, it will usually not work across file system
3803boundaries, even though the system I<mv> command sometimes compensates
3804for this. Other restrictions include whether it works on directories,
3805open files, or pre-existing files. Check L<perlport> and either the
3806rename(2) manpage or equivalent system documentation for details.
a0d0e21e 3807
16070b82
GS
3808=item require VERSION
3809
a0d0e21e
LW
3810=item require EXPR
3811
3812=item require
3813
3b825e41
RK
3814Demands a version of Perl specified by VERSION, or demands some semantics
3815specified by EXPR or by C<$_> if EXPR is not supplied.
44dcb63b 3816
3b825e41
RK
3817VERSION may be either a numeric argument such as 5.006, which will be
3818compared to C<$]>, or a literal of the form v5.6.1, which will be compared
3819to C<$^V> (aka $PERL_VERSION). A fatal error is produced at run time if
3820VERSION is greater than the version of the current Perl interpreter.
3821Compare with L</use>, which can do a similar check at compile time.
3822
3823Specifying VERSION as a literal of the form v5.6.1 should generally be
3824avoided, because it leads to misleading error messages under earlier
3825versions of Perl which do not support this syntax. The equivalent numeric
3826version should be used instead.
44dcb63b 3827
dd629d5b
GS
3828 require v5.6.1; # run time version check
3829 require 5.6.1; # ditto
3b825e41 3830 require 5.006_001; # ditto; preferred for backwards compatibility
a0d0e21e
LW
3831
3832Otherwise, demands that a library file be included if it hasn't already
3833been included. The file is included via the do-FILE mechanism, which is
19799a22 3834essentially just a variety of C<eval>. Has semantics similar to the following
a0d0e21e
LW
3835subroutine:
3836
3837 sub require {
5a964f20 3838 my($filename) = @_;
a0d0e21e 3839 return 1 if $INC{$filename};
5a964f20 3840 my($realfilename,$result);
a0d0e21e
LW
3841 ITER: {
3842 foreach $prefix (@INC) {
3843 $realfilename = "$prefix/$filename";
3844 if (-f $realfilename) {
f784dfa3 3845 $INC{$filename} = $realfilename;
a0d0e21e
LW
3846 $result = do $realfilename;
3847 last ITER;
3848 }
3849 }
3850 die "Can't find $filename in \@INC";
3851 }
f784dfa3 3852 delete $INC{$filename} if $@ || !$result;
a0d0e21e
LW
3853 die $@ if $@;
3854 die "$filename did not return true value" unless $result;
5a964f20 3855 return $result;
a0d0e21e
LW
3856 }
3857
3858Note that the file will not be included twice under the same specified
19799a22 3859name. The file must return true as the last statement to indicate
a0d0e21e 3860successful execution of any initialization code, so it's customary to
19799a22
GS
3861end such a file with C<1;> unless you're sure it'll return true
3862otherwise. But it's better just to put the C<1;>, in case you add more
a0d0e21e
LW
3863statements.
3864
54310121 3865If EXPR is a bareword, the require assumes a "F<.pm>" extension and
da0045b7 3866replaces "F<::>" with "F</>" in the filename for you,
54310121 3867to make it easy to load standard modules. This form of loading of
a0d0e21e
LW
3868modules does not risk altering your namespace.
3869
ee580363
GS
3870In other words, if you try this:
3871
b76cc8ba 3872 require Foo::Bar; # a splendid bareword
ee580363 3873
b76cc8ba 3874The require function will actually look for the "F<Foo/Bar.pm>" file in the
7660c0ab 3875directories specified in the C<@INC> array.
ee580363 3876
5a964f20 3877But if you try this:
ee580363
GS
3878
3879 $class = 'Foo::Bar';
f86cebdf 3880 require $class; # $class is not a bareword
5a964f20 3881 #or
f86cebdf 3882 require "Foo::Bar"; # not a bareword because of the ""
ee580363 3883
b76cc8ba 3884The require function will look for the "F<Foo::Bar>" file in the @INC array and
19799a22 3885will complain about not finding "F<Foo::Bar>" there. In this case you can do:
ee580363
GS
3886
3887 eval "require $class";
3888
d54b56d5
RGS
3889You can also insert hooks into the import facility, by putting directly
3890Perl code into the @INC array. There are three forms of hooks: subroutine
3891references, array references and blessed objects.
3892
3893Subroutine references are the simplest case. When the inclusion system
3894walks through @INC and encounters a subroutine, this subroutine gets
3895called with two parameters, the first being a reference to itself, and the
3896second the name of the file to be included (e.g. "F<Foo/Bar.pm>"). The
3897subroutine should return C<undef> or a filehandle, from which the file to
3898include will be read. If C<undef> is returned, C<require> will look at
3899the remaining elements of @INC.
3900
3901If the hook is an array reference, its first element must be a subroutine
3902reference. This subroutine is called as above, but the first parameter is
3903the array reference. This enables to pass indirectly some arguments to
3904the subroutine.
3905
3906In other words, you can write:
3907
3908 push @INC, \&my_sub;
3909 sub my_sub {
3910 my ($coderef, $filename) = @_; # $coderef is \&my_sub
3911 ...
3912 }
3913
3914or:
3915
3916 push @INC, [ \&my_sub, $x, $y, ... ];
3917 sub my_sub {
3918 my ($arrayref, $filename) = @_;
3919 # Retrieve $x, $y, ...
3920 my @parameters = @$arrayref[1..$#$arrayref];
3921 ...
3922 }
3923
3924If the hook is an object, it must provide an INC method, that will be
3925called as above, the first parameter being the object itself. (Note that
3926you must fully qualify the sub's name, as it is always forced into package
3927C<main>.) Here is a typical code layout:
3928
3929 # In Foo.pm
3930 package Foo;
3931 sub new { ... }
3932 sub Foo::INC {
3933 my ($self, $filename) = @_;
3934 ...
3935 }
3936
3937 # In the main program
3938 push @INC, new Foo(...);
3939
9ae8cd5b
RGS
3940Note that these hooks are also permitted to set the %INC entry
3941corresponding to the files they have loaded. See L<perlvar/%INC>.
3942
ee580363 3943For a yet-more-powerful import facility, see L</use> and L<perlmod>.
a0d0e21e
LW
3944
3945=item reset EXPR
3946
3947=item reset
3948
3949Generally used in a C<continue> block at the end of a loop to clear
7660c0ab 3950variables and reset C<??> searches so that they work again. The
a0d0e21e
LW
3951expression is interpreted as a list of single characters (hyphens
3952allowed for ranges). All variables and arrays beginning with one of
3953those letters are reset to their pristine state. If the expression is
7660c0ab 3954omitted, one-match searches (C<?pattern?>) are reset to match again. Resets
5f05dabc 3955only variables or searches in the current package. Always returns
a0d0e21e
LW
39561. Examples:
3957
3958 reset 'X'; # reset all X variables
3959 reset 'a-z'; # reset lower case variables
2b5ab1e7 3960 reset; # just reset ?one-time? searches
a0d0e21e 3961
7660c0ab 3962Resetting C<"A-Z"> is not recommended because you'll wipe out your
2b5ab1e7
TC
3963C<@ARGV> and C<@INC> arrays and your C<%ENV> hash. Resets only package
3964variables--lexical variables are unaffected, but they clean themselves
3965up on scope exit anyway, so you'll probably want to use them instead.
3966See L</my>.
a0d0e21e 3967
54310121 3968=item return EXPR
3969
3970=item return
3971
b76cc8ba 3972Returns from a subroutine, C<eval>, or C<do FILE> with the value
5a964f20 3973given in EXPR. Evaluation of EXPR may be in list, scalar, or void
54310121 3974context, depending on how the return value will be used, and the context
19799a22 3975may vary from one execution to the next (see C<wantarray>). If no EXPR
2b5ab1e7
TC
3976is given, returns an empty list in list context, the undefined value in
3977scalar context, and (of course) nothing at all in a void context.
a0d0e21e 3978
d1be9408 3979(Note that in the absence of an explicit C<return>, a subroutine, eval,
2b5ab1e7
TC
3980or do FILE will automatically return the value of the last expression
3981evaluated.)
a0d0e21e
LW
3982
3983=item reverse LIST
3984
5a964f20
TC
3985In list context, returns a list value consisting of the elements
3986of LIST in the opposite order. In scalar context, concatenates the
2b5ab1e7 3987elements of LIST and returns a string value with all characters
a0ed51b3 3988in the opposite order.
4633a7c4 3989
2f9daede 3990 print reverse <>; # line tac, last line first
4633a7c4 3991
2f9daede 3992 undef $/; # for efficiency of <>
a0ed51b3 3993 print scalar reverse <>; # character tac, last line tsrif
2f9daede
TP
3994
3995This operator is also handy for inverting a hash, although there are some
3996caveats. If a value is duplicated in the original hash, only one of those
3997can be represented as a key in the inverted hash. Also, this has to
3998unwind one hash and build a whole new one, which may take some time
2b5ab1e7 3999on a large hash, such as from a DBM file.
2f9daede
TP
4000
4001 %by_name = reverse %by_address; # Invert the hash
a0d0e21e
LW
4002
4003=item rewinddir DIRHANDLE
4004
4005Sets the current position to the beginning of the directory for the
19799a22 4006C<readdir> routine on DIRHANDLE.
a0d0e21e
LW
4007
4008=item rindex STR,SUBSTR,POSITION
4009
4010=item rindex STR,SUBSTR
4011
2b5ab1e7 4012Works just like index() except that it returns the position of the LAST
a0d0e21e
LW
4013occurrence of SUBSTR in STR. If POSITION is specified, returns the
4014last occurrence at or before that position.
4015
4016=item rmdir FILENAME
4017
54310121 4018=item rmdir
bbce6d69 4019
5a964f20 4020Deletes the directory specified by FILENAME if that directory is empty. If it
19799a22 4021succeeds it returns true, otherwise it returns false and sets C<$!> (errno). If
7660c0ab 4022FILENAME is omitted, uses C<$_>.
a0d0e21e
LW
4023
4024=item s///
4025
4026The substitution operator. See L<perlop>.
4027
4028=item scalar EXPR
4029
5a964f20 4030Forces EXPR to be interpreted in scalar context and returns the value
54310121 4031of EXPR.
cb1a09d0
AD
4032
4033 @counts = ( scalar @a, scalar @b, scalar @c );
4034
54310121 4035There is no equivalent operator to force an expression to
2b5ab1e7 4036be interpolated in list context because in practice, this is never
cb1a09d0
AD
4037needed. If you really wanted to do so, however, you could use
4038the construction C<@{[ (some expression) ]}>, but usually a simple
4039C<(some expression)> suffices.
a0d0e21e 4040
19799a22 4041Because C<scalar> is unary operator, if you accidentally use for EXPR a
2b5ab1e7
TC
4042parenthesized list, this behaves as a scalar comma expression, evaluating
4043all but the last element in void context and returning the final element
4044evaluated in scalar context. This is seldom what you want.
62c18ce2
GS
4045
4046The following single statement:
4047
4048 print uc(scalar(&foo,$bar)),$baz;
4049
4050is the moral equivalent of these two:
4051
4052 &foo;
4053 print(uc($bar),$baz);
4054
4055See L<perlop> for more details on unary operators and the comma operator.
4056
a0d0e21e
LW
4057=item seek FILEHANDLE,POSITION,WHENCE
4058
19799a22 4059Sets FILEHANDLE's position, just like the C<fseek> call of C<stdio>.
8903cb82 4060FILEHANDLE may be an expression whose value gives the name of the
9124316e
JH
4061filehandle. The values for WHENCE are C<0> to set the new position
4062I<in bytes> to POSITION, C<1> to set it to the current position plus
4063POSITION, and C<2> to set it to EOF plus POSITION (typically
4064negative). For WHENCE you may use the constants C<SEEK_SET>,
4065C<SEEK_CUR>, and C<SEEK_END> (start of the file, current position, end
4066of the file) from the Fcntl module. Returns C<1> upon success, C<0>
4067otherwise.
4068
4069Note the I<in bytes>: even if the filehandle has been set to
4070operate on characters (for example by using the C<:utf8> open
4071discipline), tell() will return byte offsets, not character offsets
4072(because implementing that would render seek() and tell() rather slow).
8903cb82 4073
19799a22
GS
4074If you want to position file for C<sysread> or C<syswrite>, don't use
4075C<seek>--buffering makes its effect on the file's system position
4076unpredictable and non-portable. Use C<sysseek> instead.
a0d0e21e 4077
2b5ab1e7
TC
4078Due to the rules and rigors of ANSI C, on some systems you have to do a
4079seek whenever you switch between reading and writing. Amongst other
4080things, this may have the effect of calling stdio's clearerr(3).
4081A WHENCE of C<1> (C<SEEK_CUR>) is useful for not moving the file position:
cb1a09d0
AD
4082
4083 seek(TEST,0,1);
4084
4085This is also useful for applications emulating C<tail -f>. Once you hit
4086EOF on your read, and then sleep for a while, you might have to stick in a
19799a22 4087seek() to reset things. The C<seek> doesn't change the current position,
8903cb82 4088but it I<does> clear the end-of-file condition on the handle, so that the
61eff3bc 4089next C<< <FILE> >> makes Perl try again to read something. We hope.
cb1a09d0 4090
9124316e
JH
4091If that doesn't work (some IO implementations are particularly
4092cantankerous), then you may need something more like this:
cb1a09d0
AD
4093
4094 for (;;) {
f86cebdf
GS
4095 for ($curpos = tell(FILE); $_ = <FILE>;
4096 $curpos = tell(FILE)) {
cb1a09d0
AD
4097 # search for some stuff and put it into files
4098 }
4099 sleep($for_a_while);
4100 seek(FILE, $curpos, 0);
4101 }
4102
a0d0e21e
LW
4103=item seekdir DIRHANDLE,POS
4104
19799a22
GS
4105Sets the current position for the C<readdir> routine on DIRHANDLE. POS
4106must be a value returned by C<telldir>. Has the same caveats about
a0d0e21e
LW
4107possible directory compaction as the corresponding system library
4108routine.
4109
4110=item select FILEHANDLE
4111
4112=item select
4113
4114Returns the currently selected filehandle. Sets the current default
4115filehandle for output, if FILEHANDLE is supplied. This has two
19799a22 4116effects: first, a C<write> or a C<print> without a filehandle will
a0d0e21e
LW
4117default to this FILEHANDLE. Second, references to variables related to
4118output will refer to this output channel. For example, if you have to
4119set the top of form format for more than one output channel, you might
4120do the following:
4121
4122 select(REPORT1);
4123 $^ = 'report1_top';
4124 select(REPORT2);
4125 $^ = 'report2_top';
4126
4127FILEHANDLE may be an expression whose value gives the name of the
4128actual filehandle. Thus:
4129
4130 $oldfh = select(STDERR); $| = 1; select($oldfh);
4131
4633a7c4
LW
4132Some programmers may prefer to think of filehandles as objects with
4133methods, preferring to write the last example as:
a0d0e21e 4134
28757baa 4135 use IO::Handle;
a0d0e21e
LW
4136 STDERR->autoflush(1);
4137
4138=item select RBITS,WBITS,EBITS,TIMEOUT
4139
f86cebdf 4140This calls the select(2) system call with the bit masks specified, which
19799a22 4141can be constructed using C<fileno> and C<vec>, along these lines:
a0d0e21e
LW
4142
4143 $rin = $win = $ein = '';
4144 vec($rin,fileno(STDIN),1) = 1;
4145 vec($win,fileno(STDOUT),1) = 1;
4146 $ein = $rin | $win;
4147
4148If you want to select on many filehandles you might wish to write a
4149subroutine:
4150
4151 sub fhbits {
5a964f20
TC
4152 my(@fhlist) = split(' ',$_[0]);
4153 my($bits);
a0d0e21e
LW
4154 for (@fhlist) {
4155 vec($bits,fileno($_),1) = 1;
4156 }
4157 $bits;
4158 }
4633a7c4 4159 $rin = fhbits('STDIN TTY SOCK');
a0d0e21e
LW
4160
4161The usual idiom is:
4162
4163 ($nfound,$timeleft) =
4164 select($rout=$rin, $wout=$win, $eout=$ein, $timeout);
4165
54310121 4166or to block until something becomes ready just do this
a0d0e21e
LW
4167
4168 $nfound = select($rout=$rin, $wout=$win, $eout=$ein, undef);
4169
19799a22
GS
4170Most systems do not bother to return anything useful in $timeleft, so
4171calling select() in scalar context just returns $nfound.
c07a80fd 4172
5f05dabc 4173Any of the bit masks can also be undef. The timeout, if specified, is
a0d0e21e 4174in seconds, which may be fractional. Note: not all implementations are
be119125 4175capable of returning the $timeleft. If not, they always return
19799a22 4176$timeleft equal to the supplied $timeout.
a0d0e21e 4177
ff68c719 4178You can effect a sleep of 250 milliseconds this way:
a0d0e21e
LW
4179
4180 select(undef, undef, undef, 0.25);
4181
19799a22 4182B<WARNING>: One should not attempt to mix buffered I/O (like C<read>
61eff3bc 4183or <FH>) with C<select>, except as permitted by POSIX, and even
19799a22 4184then only on POSIX systems. You have to use C<sysread> instead.
a0d0e21e
LW
4185
4186=item semctl ID,SEMNUM,CMD,ARG
4187
19799a22 4188Calls the System V IPC function C<semctl>. You'll probably have to say
0ade1984
JH
4189
4190 use IPC::SysV;
4191
4192first to get the correct constant definitions. If CMD is IPC_STAT or
4193GETALL, then ARG must be a variable which will hold the returned
e4038a1f
MS
4194semid_ds structure or semaphore value array. Returns like C<ioctl>:
4195the undefined value for error, "C<0 but true>" for zero, or the actual
4196return value otherwise. The ARG must consist of a vector of native
106325ad 4197short integers, which may be created with C<pack("s!",(0)x$nsem)>.
4755096e
GS
4198See also L<perlipc/"SysV IPC">, C<IPC::SysV>, C<IPC::Semaphore>
4199documentation.
a0d0e21e
LW
4200
4201=item semget KEY,NSEMS,FLAGS
4202
4203Calls the System V IPC function semget. Returns the semaphore id, or
4755096e
GS
4204the undefined value if there is an error. See also
4205L<perlipc/"SysV IPC">, C<IPC::SysV>, C<IPC::SysV::Semaphore>
4206documentation.
a0d0e21e
LW
4207
4208=item semop KEY,OPSTRING
4209
4210Calls the System V IPC function semop to perform semaphore operations
5354997a 4211such as signalling and waiting. OPSTRING must be a packed array of
a0d0e21e 4212semop structures. Each semop structure can be generated with
f878ba33 4213C<pack("s!3", $semnum, $semop, $semflag)>. The number of semaphore
19799a22
GS
4214operations is implied by the length of OPSTRING. Returns true if
4215successful, or false if there is an error. As an example, the
4216following code waits on semaphore $semnum of semaphore id $semid:
a0d0e21e 4217
f878ba33 4218 $semop = pack("s!3", $semnum, -1, 0);
a0d0e21e
LW
4219 die "Semaphore trouble: $!\n" unless semop($semid, $semop);
4220
4755096e
GS
4221To signal the semaphore, replace C<-1> with C<1>. See also
4222L<perlipc/"SysV IPC">, C<IPC::SysV>, and C<IPC::SysV::Semaphore>
4223documentation.
a0d0e21e
LW
4224
4225=item send SOCKET,MSG,FLAGS,TO
4226
4227=item send SOCKET,MSG,FLAGS
4228
9124316e
JH
4229Sends a message on a socket. Attemps to send the scalar MSG to the
4230SOCKET filehandle. Takes the same flags as the system call of the
4231same name. On unconnected sockets you must specify a destination to
4232send TO, in which case it does a C C<sendto>. Returns the number of
4233characters sent, or the undefined value if there is an error. The C
4234system call sendmsg(2) is currently unimplemented. See
4235L<perlipc/"UDP: Message Passing"> for examples.
4236
4237Note the I<characters>: depending on the status of the socket, either
4238(8-bit) bytes or characters are sent. By default all sockets operate
4239on bytes, but for example if the socket has been changed using
4240binmode() to operate with the C<:utf8> discipline (see L</open>, or
4241the C<open> pragma, L<open>), the I/O will operate on characters, not
4242bytes.
a0d0e21e
LW
4243
4244=item setpgrp PID,PGRP
4245
7660c0ab 4246Sets the current process group for the specified PID, C<0> for the current
a0d0e21e 4247process. Will produce a fatal error if used on a machine that doesn't
81777298
GS
4248implement POSIX setpgid(2) or BSD setpgrp(2). If the arguments are omitted,
4249it defaults to C<0,0>. Note that the BSD 4.2 version of C<setpgrp> does not
4250accept any arguments, so only C<setpgrp(0,0)> is portable. See also
4251C<POSIX::setsid()>.
a0d0e21e
LW
4252
4253=item setpriority WHICH,WHO,PRIORITY
4254
4255Sets the current priority for a process, a process group, or a user.
f86cebdf
GS
4256(See setpriority(2).) Will produce a fatal error if used on a machine
4257that doesn't implement setpriority(2).
a0d0e21e
LW
4258
4259=item setsockopt SOCKET,LEVEL,OPTNAME,OPTVAL
4260
4261Sets the socket option requested. Returns undefined if there is an
7660c0ab 4262error. OPTVAL may be specified as C<undef> if you don't want to pass an
a0d0e21e
LW
4263argument.
4264
4265=item shift ARRAY
4266
4267=item shift
4268
4269Shifts the first value of the array off and returns it, shortening the
4270array by 1 and moving everything down. If there are no elements in the
4271array, returns the undefined value. If ARRAY is omitted, shifts the
7660c0ab
A
4272C<@_> array within the lexical scope of subroutines and formats, and the
4273C<@ARGV> array at file scopes or within the lexical scopes established by
7d30b5c4 4274the C<eval ''>, C<BEGIN {}>, C<INIT {}>, C<CHECK {}>, and C<END {}>
4f25aa18
GS
4275constructs.
4276
a1b2c429 4277See also C<unshift>, C<push>, and C<pop>. C<shift> and C<unshift> do the
19799a22 4278same thing to the left end of an array that C<pop> and C<push> do to the
977336f5 4279right end.
a0d0e21e
LW
4280
4281=item shmctl ID,CMD,ARG
4282
0ade1984
JH
4283Calls the System V IPC function shmctl. You'll probably have to say
4284
4285 use IPC::SysV;
4286
7660c0ab
A
4287first to get the correct constant definitions. If CMD is C<IPC_STAT>,
4288then ARG must be a variable which will hold the returned C<shmid_ds>
4289structure. Returns like ioctl: the undefined value for error, "C<0> but
0ade1984 4290true" for zero, or the actual return value otherwise.
4755096e 4291See also L<perlipc/"SysV IPC"> and C<IPC::SysV> documentation.
a0d0e21e
LW
4292
4293=item shmget KEY,SIZE,FLAGS
4294
4295Calls the System V IPC function shmget. Returns the shared memory
4296segment id, or the undefined value if there is an error.
4755096e 4297See also L<perlipc/"SysV IPC"> and C<IPC::SysV> documentation.
a0d0e21e
LW
4298
4299=item shmread ID,VAR,POS,SIZE
4300
4301=item shmwrite ID,STRING,POS,SIZE
4302
4303Reads or writes the System V shared memory segment ID starting at
4304position POS for size SIZE by attaching to it, copying in/out, and
5a964f20 4305detaching from it. When reading, VAR must be a variable that will
a0d0e21e
LW
4306hold the data read. When writing, if STRING is too long, only SIZE
4307bytes are used; if STRING is too short, nulls are written to fill out
19799a22 4308SIZE bytes. Return true if successful, or false if there is an error.
4755096e
GS
4309shmread() taints the variable. See also L<perlipc/"SysV IPC">,
4310C<IPC::SysV> documentation, and the C<IPC::Shareable> module from CPAN.
a0d0e21e
LW
4311
4312=item shutdown SOCKET,HOW
4313
4314Shuts down a socket connection in the manner indicated by HOW, which
4315has the same interpretation as in the system call of the same name.
4316
f86cebdf
GS
4317 shutdown(SOCKET, 0); # I/we have stopped reading data
4318 shutdown(SOCKET, 1); # I/we have stopped writing data
4319 shutdown(SOCKET, 2); # I/we have stopped using this socket
5a964f20
TC
4320
4321This is useful with sockets when you want to tell the other
4322side you're done writing but not done reading, or vice versa.
b76cc8ba 4323It's also a more insistent form of close because it also
19799a22 4324disables the file descriptor in any forked copies in other
5a964f20
TC
4325processes.
4326
a0d0e21e
LW
4327=item sin EXPR
4328
54310121 4329=item sin
bbce6d69 4330
a0d0e21e 4331Returns the sine of EXPR (expressed in radians). If EXPR is omitted,
7660c0ab 4332returns sine of C<$_>.
a0d0e21e 4333
ca6e1c26 4334For the inverse sine operation, you may use the C<Math::Trig::asin>
28757baa 4335function, or use this relation:
4336
4337 sub asin { atan2($_[0], sqrt(1 - $_[0] * $_[0])) }
4338
a0d0e21e
LW
4339=item sleep EXPR
4340
4341=item sleep
4342
4343Causes the script to sleep for EXPR seconds, or forever if no EXPR.
7660c0ab 4344May be interrupted if the process receives a signal such as C<SIGALRM>.
1d3434b8 4345Returns the number of seconds actually slept. You probably cannot
19799a22
GS
4346mix C<alarm> and C<sleep> calls, because C<sleep> is often implemented
4347using C<alarm>.
a0d0e21e
LW
4348
4349On some older systems, it may sleep up to a full second less than what
4350you requested, depending on how it counts seconds. Most modern systems
5a964f20
TC
4351always sleep the full amount. They may appear to sleep longer than that,
4352however, because your process might not be scheduled right away in a
4353busy multitasking system.
a0d0e21e 4354
cb1a09d0 4355For delays of finer granularity than one second, you may use Perl's
68f8bed4 4356C<syscall> interface to access setitimer(2) if your system supports
83df6a1d
JH
4357it, or else see L</select> above. The Time::HiRes module (from CPAN,
4358and starting from Perl 5.8 part of the standard distribution) may also
4359help.
cb1a09d0 4360
b6e2112e 4361See also the POSIX module's C<pause> function.
5f05dabc 4362
80cbd5ad
JH
4363=item sockatmark SOCKET
4364
4365Returns true if the socket is positioned at the out-of-band mark
4366(also known as the urgent data mark), false otherwise. Use right
4367after reading from the socket.
4368
4369Not available directly, one has to import the function from
4370the IO::Socket extension
4371
4372 use IO::Socket 'sockatmark';
4373
4374Even this doesn't guarantee that sockatmark() really is available,
4375though, because sockatmark() is a relatively recent addition to
4376the family of socket functions. If it is unavailable, attempt to
4377use it will fail
4378
4379 IO::Socket::atmark not implemented on this architecture ...
4380
4381See also L<IO::Socket>.
4382
a0d0e21e
LW
4383=item socket SOCKET,DOMAIN,TYPE,PROTOCOL
4384
4385Opens a socket of the specified kind and attaches it to filehandle
19799a22
GS
4386SOCKET. DOMAIN, TYPE, and PROTOCOL are specified the same as for
4387the system call of the same name. You should C<use Socket> first
4388to get the proper definitions imported. See the examples in
4389L<perlipc/"Sockets: Client/Server Communication">.
a0d0e21e 4390
8d2a6795
GS
4391On systems that support a close-on-exec flag on files, the flag will
4392be set for the newly opened file descriptor, as determined by the
4393value of $^F. See L<perlvar/$^F>.
4394
a0d0e21e
LW
4395=item socketpair SOCKET1,SOCKET2,DOMAIN,TYPE,PROTOCOL
4396
4397Creates an unnamed pair of sockets in the specified domain, of the
5f05dabc 4398specified type. DOMAIN, TYPE, and PROTOCOL are specified the same as
a0d0e21e 4399for the system call of the same name. If unimplemented, yields a fatal
19799a22 4400error. Returns true if successful.
a0d0e21e 4401
8d2a6795
GS
4402On systems that support a close-on-exec flag on files, the flag will
4403be set for the newly opened file descriptors, as determined by the value
4404of $^F. See L<perlvar/$^F>.
4405
19799a22 4406Some systems defined C<pipe> in terms of C<socketpair>, in which a call
5a964f20
TC
4407to C<pipe(Rdr, Wtr)> is essentially:
4408
4409 use Socket;
4410 socketpair(Rdr, Wtr, AF_UNIX, SOCK_STREAM, PF_UNSPEC);
4411 shutdown(Rdr, 1); # no more writing for reader
4412 shutdown(Wtr, 0); # no more reading for writer
4413
4414See L<perlipc> for an example of socketpair use.
4415
a0d0e21e
LW
4416=item sort SUBNAME LIST
4417
4418=item sort BLOCK LIST
4419
4420=item sort LIST
4421
2f9daede 4422Sorts the LIST and returns the sorted list value. If SUBNAME or BLOCK
19799a22 4423is omitted, C<sort>s in standard string comparison order. If SUBNAME is
2f9daede 4424specified, it gives the name of a subroutine that returns an integer
7660c0ab 4425less than, equal to, or greater than C<0>, depending on how the elements
61eff3bc 4426of the list are to be ordered. (The C<< <=> >> and C<cmp>
2f9daede 4427operators are extremely useful in such routines.) SUBNAME may be a
1d3434b8
GS
4428scalar variable name (unsubscripted), in which case the value provides
4429the name of (or a reference to) the actual subroutine to use. In place
4430of a SUBNAME, you can provide a BLOCK as an anonymous, in-line sort
4431subroutine.
a0d0e21e 4432
43481408 4433If the subroutine's prototype is C<($$)>, the elements to be compared
f9a36357
GS
4434are passed by reference in C<@_>, as for a normal subroutine. This is
4435slower than unprototyped subroutines, where the elements to be
4436compared are passed into the subroutine
43481408
GS
4437as the package global variables $a and $b (see example below). Note that
4438in the latter case, it is usually counter-productive to declare $a and
4439$b as lexicals.
4440
4441In either case, the subroutine may not be recursive. The values to be
4442compared are always passed by reference, so don't modify them.
a0d0e21e 4443
0a753a76 4444You also cannot exit out of the sort block or subroutine using any of the
19799a22 4445loop control operators described in L<perlsyn> or with C<goto>.
0a753a76 4446
a034a98d
DD
4447When C<use locale> is in effect, C<sort LIST> sorts LIST according to the
4448current collation locale. See L<perllocale>.
4449
58c7fc7c
JH
4450Perl 5.6 and earlier used a quicksort algorithm to implement sort.
4451That algorithm was not stable, and I<could> go quadratic. (A I<stable> sort
4452preserves the input order of elements that compare equal. Although
4453quicksort's run time is O(NlogN) when averaged over all arrays of
4454length N, the time can be O(N**2), I<quadratic> behavior, for some
4455inputs.) In 5.7, the quicksort implementation was replaced with
4456a stable mergesort algorithm whose worst case behavior is O(NlogN).
4457But benchmarks indicated that for some inputs, on some platforms,
4458the original quicksort was faster. 5.8 has a sort pragma for
4459limited control of the sort. Its rather blunt control of the
4460underlying algorithm may not persist into future perls, but the
4461ability to characterize the input or output in implementation
4462independent ways quite probably will. See L</use>.
c16425f1 4463
a0d0e21e
LW
4464Examples:
4465
4466 # sort lexically
4467 @articles = sort @files;
4468
4469 # same thing, but with explicit sort routine
4470 @articles = sort {$a cmp $b} @files;
4471
cb1a09d0 4472 # now case-insensitively
54310121 4473 @articles = sort {uc($a) cmp uc($b)} @files;
cb1a09d0 4474
a0d0e21e
LW
4475 # same thing in reversed order
4476 @articles = sort {$b cmp $a} @files;
4477
4478 # sort numerically ascending
4479 @articles = sort {$a <=> $b} @files;
4480
4481 # sort numerically descending
4482 @articles = sort {$b <=> $a} @files;
4483
19799a22
GS
4484 # this sorts the %age hash by value instead of key
4485 # using an in-line function
4486 @eldest = sort { $age{$b} <=> $age{$a} } keys %age;
4487
a0d0e21e
LW
4488 # sort using explicit subroutine name
4489 sub byage {
2f9daede 4490 $age{$a} <=> $age{$b}; # presuming numeric
a0d0e21e
LW
4491 }
4492 @sortedclass = sort byage @class;
4493
19799a22
GS
4494 sub backwards { $b cmp $a }
4495 @harry = qw(dog cat x Cain Abel);
4496 @george = qw(gone chased yz Punished Axed);
a0d0e21e
LW
4497 print sort @harry;
4498 # prints AbelCaincatdogx
4499 print sort backwards @harry;
4500 # prints xdogcatCainAbel
4501 print sort @george, 'to', @harry;
4502 # prints AbelAxedCainPunishedcatchaseddoggonetoxyz
4503
54310121 4504 # inefficiently sort by descending numeric compare using
4505 # the first integer after the first = sign, or the
cb1a09d0
AD
4506 # whole record case-insensitively otherwise
4507
4508 @new = sort {
4509 ($b =~ /=(\d+)/)[0] <=> ($a =~ /=(\d+)/)[0]
4510 ||
4511 uc($a) cmp uc($b)
4512 } @old;
4513
4514 # same thing, but much more efficiently;
4515 # we'll build auxiliary indices instead
4516 # for speed
4517 @nums = @caps = ();
54310121 4518 for (@old) {
cb1a09d0
AD
4519 push @nums, /=(\d+)/;
4520 push @caps, uc($_);
54310121 4521 }
cb1a09d0
AD
4522
4523 @new = @old[ sort {
4524 $nums[$b] <=> $nums[$a]
4525 ||
4526 $caps[$a] cmp $caps[$b]
4527 } 0..$#old
4528 ];
4529
19799a22 4530 # same thing, but without any temps
cb1a09d0 4531 @new = map { $_->[0] }
19799a22
GS
4532 sort { $b->[1] <=> $a->[1]
4533 ||
4534 $a->[2] cmp $b->[2]
4535 } map { [$_, /=(\d+)/, uc($_)] } @old;
61eff3bc 4536
43481408
GS
4537 # using a prototype allows you to use any comparison subroutine
4538 # as a sort subroutine (including other package's subroutines)
4539 package other;
4540 sub backwards ($$) { $_[1] cmp $_[0]; } # $a and $b are not set here
4541
4542 package main;
4543 @new = sort other::backwards @old;
cb1a09d0 4544
58c7fc7c
JH
4545 # guarantee stability, regardless of algorithm
4546 use sort 'stable';
4547 @new = sort { substr($a, 3, 5) cmp substr($b, 3, 5) } @old;
4548
4549 # force use of quicksort (not portable outside Perl 5.8)
4550 use sort '_quicksort'; # note discouraging _
4551 @new = sort { substr($a, 3, 5) cmp substr($b, 3, 5) } @old;
4552
4553 # similar to the previous example, but demand stability as well
4554 use sort qw( _mergesort stable );
4555 @new = sort { substr($a, 3, 5) cmp substr($b, 3, 5) } @old;
4556
19799a22
GS
4557If you're using strict, you I<must not> declare $a
4558and $b as lexicals. They are package globals. That means
47223a36 4559if you're in the C<main> package and type
13a2d996 4560
47223a36 4561 @articles = sort {$b <=> $a} @files;
13a2d996 4562
47223a36
JH
4563then C<$a> and C<$b> are C<$main::a> and C<$main::b> (or C<$::a> and C<$::b>),
4564but if you're in the C<FooPack> package, it's the same as typing
cb1a09d0
AD
4565
4566 @articles = sort {$FooPack::b <=> $FooPack::a} @files;
4567
55497cff 4568The comparison function is required to behave. If it returns
7660c0ab
A
4569inconsistent results (sometimes saying C<$x[1]> is less than C<$x[2]> and
4570sometimes saying the opposite, for example) the results are not
4571well-defined.
55497cff 4572
a0d0e21e
LW
4573=item splice ARRAY,OFFSET,LENGTH,LIST
4574
4575=item splice ARRAY,OFFSET,LENGTH
4576
4577=item splice ARRAY,OFFSET
4578
453f9044
GS
4579=item splice ARRAY
4580
a0d0e21e 4581Removes the elements designated by OFFSET and LENGTH from an array, and
5a964f20
TC
4582replaces them with the elements of LIST, if any. In list context,
4583returns the elements removed from the array. In scalar context,
43051805 4584returns the last element removed, or C<undef> if no elements are
48cdf507 4585removed. The array grows or shrinks as necessary.
19799a22 4586If OFFSET is negative then it starts that far from the end of the array.
48cdf507 4587If LENGTH is omitted, removes everything from OFFSET onward.
453f9044
GS
4588If LENGTH is negative, leaves that many elements off the end of the array.
4589If both OFFSET and LENGTH are omitted, removes everything.
4590
48cdf507 4591The following equivalences hold (assuming C<$[ == 0>):
a0d0e21e 4592
48cdf507 4593 push(@a,$x,$y) splice(@a,@a,0,$x,$y)
a0d0e21e
LW
4594 pop(@a) splice(@a,-1)
4595 shift(@a) splice(@a,0,1)
4596 unshift(@a,$x,$y) splice(@a,0,0,$x,$y)
5a964f20 4597 $a[$x] = $y splice(@a,$x,1,$y)
a0d0e21e
LW
4598
4599Example, assuming array lengths are passed before arrays:
4600
4601 sub aeq { # compare two list values
5a964f20
TC
4602 my(@a) = splice(@_,0,shift);
4603 my(@b) = splice(@_,0,shift);
a0d0e21e
LW
4604 return 0 unless @a == @b; # same len?
4605 while (@a) {
4606 return 0 if pop(@a) ne pop(@b);
4607 }
4608 return 1;
4609 }
4610 if (&aeq($len,@foo[1..$len],0+@bar,@bar)) { ... }
4611
4612=item split /PATTERN/,EXPR,LIMIT
4613
4614=item split /PATTERN/,EXPR
4615
4616=item split /PATTERN/
4617
4618=item split
4619
19799a22 4620Splits a string into a list of strings and returns that list. By default,
5a964f20 4621empty leading fields are preserved, and empty trailing ones are deleted.
a0d0e21e 4622
46836f5c
GS
4623In scalar context, returns the number of fields found and splits into
4624the C<@_> array. Use of split in scalar context is deprecated, however,
4625because it clobbers your subroutine arguments.
a0d0e21e 4626
7660c0ab 4627If EXPR is omitted, splits the C<$_> string. If PATTERN is also omitted,
4633a7c4
LW
4628splits on whitespace (after skipping any leading whitespace). Anything
4629matching PATTERN is taken to be a delimiter separating the fields. (Note
fb73857a 4630that the delimiter may be longer than one character.)
4631
836e0ee7 4632If LIMIT is specified and positive, it represents the maximum number
e833de1e
BS
4633of fields the EXPR will be split into, though the actual number of
4634fields returned depends on the number of times PATTERN matches within
4635EXPR. If LIMIT is unspecified or zero, trailing null fields are
4636stripped (which potential users of C<pop> would do well to remember).
4637If LIMIT is negative, it is treated as if an arbitrarily large LIMIT
4638had been specified. Note that splitting an EXPR that evaluates to the
4639empty string always returns the empty list, regardless of the LIMIT
4640specified.
a0d0e21e
LW
4641
4642A pattern matching the null string (not to be confused with
748a9306 4643a null pattern C<//>, which is just one member of the set of patterns
a0d0e21e
LW
4644matching a null string) will split the value of EXPR into separate
4645characters at each point it matches that way. For example:
4646
4647 print join(':', split(/ */, 'hi there'));
4648
4649produces the output 'h:i:t:h:e:r:e'.
4650
6de67870
JP
4651Using the empty pattern C<//> specifically matches the null string, and is
4652not be confused with the use of C<//> to mean "the last successful pattern
4653match".
4654
0156e0fd
RB
4655Empty leading (or trailing) fields are produced when there positive width
4656matches at the beginning (or end) of the string; a zero-width match at the
4657beginning (or end) of the string does not produce an empty field. For
4658example:
4659
4660 print join(':', split(/(?=\w)/, 'hi there!'));
4661
4662produces the output 'h:i :t:h:e:r:e!'.
4663
5f05dabc 4664The LIMIT parameter can be used to split a line partially
a0d0e21e
LW
4665
4666 ($login, $passwd, $remainder) = split(/:/, $_, 3);
4667
4668When assigning to a list, if LIMIT is omitted, Perl supplies a LIMIT
4669one larger than the number of variables in the list, to avoid
4670unnecessary work. For the list above LIMIT would have been 4 by
4671default. In time critical applications it behooves you not to split
4672into more fields than you really need.
4673
19799a22 4674If the PATTERN contains parentheses, additional list elements are
a0d0e21e
LW
4675created from each matching substring in the delimiter.
4676
da0045b7 4677 split(/([,-])/, "1-10,20", 3);
a0d0e21e
LW
4678
4679produces the list value
4680
4681 (1, '-', 10, ',', 20)
4682
19799a22 4683If you had the entire header of a normal Unix email message in $header,
4633a7c4
LW
4684you could split it up into fields and their values this way:
4685
4686 $header =~ s/\n\s+/ /g; # fix continuation lines
fb73857a 4687 %hdrs = (UNIX_FROM => split /^(\S*?):\s*/m, $header);
4633a7c4 4688
a0d0e21e
LW
4689The pattern C</PATTERN/> may be replaced with an expression to specify
4690patterns that vary at runtime. (To do runtime compilation only once,
748a9306
LW
4691use C</$variable/o>.)
4692
4693As a special case, specifying a PATTERN of space (C<' '>) will split on
19799a22 4694white space just as C<split> with no arguments does. Thus, C<split(' ')> can
748a9306
LW
4695be used to emulate B<awk>'s default behavior, whereas C<split(/ /)>
4696will give you as many null initial fields as there are leading spaces.
19799a22
GS
4697A C<split> on C</\s+/> is like a C<split(' ')> except that any leading
4698whitespace produces a null first field. A C<split> with no arguments
748a9306 4699really does a C<split(' ', $_)> internally.
a0d0e21e 4700
cc50a203 4701A PATTERN of C</^/> is treated as if it were C</^/m>, since it isn't
1ec94568
MG
4702much use otherwise.
4703
a0d0e21e
LW
4704Example:
4705
5a964f20
TC
4706 open(PASSWD, '/etc/passwd');
4707 while (<PASSWD>) {
5b3eff12
MS
4708 chomp;
4709 ($login, $passwd, $uid, $gid,
f86cebdf 4710 $gcos, $home, $shell) = split(/:/);
5a964f20 4711 #...
a0d0e21e
LW
4712 }
4713
6de67870
JP
4714As with regular pattern matching, any capturing parentheses that are not
4715matched in a C<split()> will be set to C<undef> when returned:
4716
4717 @fields = split /(A)|B/, "1A2B3";
4718 # @fields is (1, 'A', 2, undef, 3)
a0d0e21e 4719
5f05dabc 4720=item sprintf FORMAT, LIST
a0d0e21e 4721
6662521e
GS
4722Returns a string formatted by the usual C<printf> conventions of the C
4723library function C<sprintf>. See below for more details
4724and see L<sprintf(3)> or L<printf(3)> on your system for an explanation of
4725the general principles.
4726
4727For example:
4728
4729 # Format number with up to 8 leading zeroes
4730 $result = sprintf("%08d", $number);
4731
4732 # Round number to 3 digits after decimal point
4733 $rounded = sprintf("%.3f", $number);
74a77017 4734
19799a22
GS
4735Perl does its own C<sprintf> formatting--it emulates the C
4736function C<sprintf>, but it doesn't use it (except for floating-point
74a77017 4737numbers, and even then only the standard modifiers are allowed). As a
19799a22 4738result, any non-standard extensions in your local C<sprintf> are not
74a77017
CS
4739available from Perl.
4740
194e7b38
DC
4741Unlike C<printf>, C<sprintf> does not do what you probably mean when you
4742pass it an array as your first argument. The array is given scalar context,
4743and instead of using the 0th element of the array as the format, Perl will
4744use the count of elements in the array as the format, which is almost never
4745useful.
4746
19799a22 4747Perl's C<sprintf> permits the following universally-known conversions:
74a77017
CS
4748
4749 %% a percent sign
4750 %c a character with the given number
4751 %s a string
4752 %d a signed integer, in decimal
4753 %u an unsigned integer, in decimal
4754 %o an unsigned integer, in octal
4755 %x an unsigned integer, in hexadecimal
4756 %e a floating-point number, in scientific notation
4757 %f a floating-point number, in fixed decimal notation
4758 %g a floating-point number, in %e or %f notation
4759
1b3f7d21 4760In addition, Perl permits the following widely-supported conversions:
74a77017 4761
74a77017
CS
4762 %X like %x, but using upper-case letters
4763 %E like %e, but using an upper-case "E"
4764 %G like %g, but with an upper-case "E" (if applicable)
4f19785b 4765 %b an unsigned integer, in binary
74a77017 4766 %p a pointer (outputs the Perl value's address in hexadecimal)
1b3f7d21 4767 %n special: *stores* the number of characters output so far
b76cc8ba 4768 into the next variable in the parameter list
74a77017 4769
1b3f7d21
CS
4770Finally, for backward (and we do mean "backward") compatibility, Perl
4771permits these unnecessary but widely-supported conversions:
74a77017 4772
1b3f7d21 4773 %i a synonym for %d
74a77017
CS
4774 %D a synonym for %ld
4775 %U a synonym for %lu
4776 %O a synonym for %lo
4777 %F a synonym for %f
4778
b73fd64e
JH
4779Note that the number of exponent digits in the scientific notation by
4780C<%e>, C<%E>, C<%g> and C<%G> for numbers with the modulus of the
4781exponent less than 100 is system-dependent: it may be three or less
4782(zero-padded as necessary). In other words, 1.23 times ten to the
478399th may be either "1.23e99" or "1.23e099".
d764f01a 4784
74a77017
CS
4785Perl permits the following universally-known flags between the C<%>
4786and the conversion letter:
4787
4788 space prefix positive number with a space
4789 + prefix positive number with a plus sign
4790 - left-justify within the field
4791 0 use zeros, not spaces, to right-justify
a3cb178b 4792 # prefix non-zero octal with "0", non-zero hex with "0x"
74a77017 4793 number minimum field width
f86cebdf
GS
4794 .number "precision": digits after decimal point for
4795 floating-point, max length for string, minimum length
4796 for integer
74a77017 4797 l interpret integer as C type "long" or "unsigned long"
74a77017 4798 h interpret integer as C type "short" or "unsigned short"
661cc6a6 4799 If no flags, interpret integer as C type "int" or "unsigned"
74a77017 4800
eb3fce90
JH
4801Perl supports parameter ordering, in other words, fetching the
4802parameters in some explicitly specified "random" ordering as opposed
4803to the default implicit sequential ordering. The syntax is, instead
4804of the C<%> and C<*>, to use C<%>I<digits>C<$> and C<*>I<digits>C<$>,
4805where the I<digits> is the wanted index, from one upwards. For example:
4806
4807 printf "%2\$d %1\$d\n", 12, 34; # will print "34 12\n"
4808 printf "%*2\$d\n", 12, 3; # will print " 12\n"
4809
4810Note that using the reordering syntax does not interfere with the usual
4811implicit sequential fetching of the parameters:
4812
4813 printf "%2\$d %d\n", 12, 34; # will print "34 12\n"
4814 printf "%2\$d %d %d\n", 12, 34; # will print "34 12 34\n"
4815 printf "%3\$d %d %d\n", 12, 34, 56; # will print "56 12 34\n"
4816 printf "%2\$*3\$d %d\n", 12, 34, 3; # will print " 34 12\n"
4817 printf "%*3\$2\$d %d\n", 12, 34, 3; # will print " 34 12\n"
4818
4628e4f8 4819There are also two Perl-specific flags:
74a77017 4820
eb3fce90
JH
4821 V interpret integer as Perl's standard integer type
4822 v interpret string as a vector of integers, output as
4823 numbers separated either by dots, or by an arbitrary
4824 string received from the argument list when the flag
07698885 4825 is preceded by "*"
74a77017 4826
19799a22 4827Where a number would appear in the flags, an asterisk (C<*>) may be
74a77017
CS
4828used instead, in which case Perl uses the next item in the parameter
4829list as the given number (that is, as the field width or precision).
19799a22
GS
4830If a field width obtained through C<*> is negative, it has the same
4831effect as the C<-> flag: left-justification.
74a77017 4832
b22c7a20
GS
4833The C<v> flag is useful for displaying ordinal values of characters
4834in arbitrary strings:
4835
4836 printf "version is v%vd\n", $^V; # Perl's version
4837 printf "address is %*vX\n", ":", $addr; # IPv6 address
dd629d5b 4838 printf "bits are %*vb\n", " ", $bits; # random bitstring
b22c7a20 4839
74a77017
CS
4840If C<use locale> is in effect, the character used for the decimal
4841point in formatted real numbers is affected by the LC_NUMERIC locale.
4842See L<perllocale>.
a0d0e21e 4843
07158430 4844If Perl understands "quads" (64-bit integers) (this requires
a8764340
GS
4845either that the platform natively support quads or that Perl
4846be specifically compiled to support quads), the characters
07158430
JH
4847
4848 d u o x X b i D U O
4849
4850print quads, and they may optionally be preceded by
4851
4852 ll L q
4853
4854For example
4855
4856 %lld %16LX %qo
4857
46465067 4858You can find out whether your Perl supports quads via L<Config>:
07158430
JH
4859
4860 use Config;
10cc9d2a 4861 ($Config{use64bitint} eq 'define' || $Config{longsize} == 8) &&
46465067 4862 print "quads\n";
07158430
JH
4863
4864If Perl understands "long doubles" (this requires that the platform
a8764340 4865support long doubles), the flags
07158430
JH
4866
4867 e f g E F G
4868
4869may optionally be preceded by
4870
4871 ll L
4872
4873For example
4874
4875 %llf %Lg
4876
4877You can find out whether your Perl supports long doubles via L<Config>:
4878
4879 use Config;
46465067 4880 $Config{d_longdbl} eq 'define' && print "long doubles\n";
07158430 4881
a0d0e21e
LW
4882=item sqrt EXPR
4883
54310121 4884=item sqrt
bbce6d69 4885
a0d0e21e 4886Return the square root of EXPR. If EXPR is omitted, returns square
2b5ab1e7
TC
4887root of C<$_>. Only works on non-negative operands, unless you've
4888loaded the standard Math::Complex module.
4889
4890 use Math::Complex;
4891 print sqrt(-2); # prints 1.4142135623731i
a0d0e21e
LW
4892
4893=item srand EXPR
4894
93dc8474
CS
4895=item srand
4896
0686c0b8
JH
4897Sets the random number seed for the C<rand> operator.
4898
0686c0b8
JH
4899The point of the function is to "seed" the C<rand> function so that
4900C<rand> can produce a different sequence each time you run your
e0b236fe 4901program.
0686c0b8 4902
e0b236fe
JH
4903If srand() is not called explicitly, it is called implicitly at the
4904first use of the C<rand> operator. However, this was not the case in
4905versions of Perl before 5.004, so if your script will run under older
4906Perl versions, it should call C<srand>.
93dc8474 4907
e0b236fe
JH
4908Most programs won't even call srand() at all, except those that
4909need a cryptographically-strong starting point rather than the
4910generally acceptable default, which is based on time of day,
4911process ID, and memory allocation, or the F</dev/urandom> device,
4912if available.
9be67dbc 4913
e0b236fe
JH
4914You can call srand($seed) with the same $seed to reproduce the
4915I<same> sequence from rand(), but this is usually reserved for
4916generating predictable results for testing or debugging.
4917Otherwise, don't call srand() more than once in your program.
0686c0b8 4918
3a3e71eb
JH
4919Do B<not> call srand() (i.e. without an argument) more than once in
4920a script. The internal state of the random number generator should
0686c0b8 4921contain more entropy than can be provided by any seed, so calling
e0b236fe 4922srand() again actually I<loses> randomness.
0686c0b8 4923
e0b236fe
JH
4924Most implementations of C<srand> take an integer and will silently
4925truncate decimal numbers. This means C<srand(42)> will usually
4926produce the same results as C<srand(42.1)>. To be safe, always pass
4927C<srand> an integer.
0686c0b8
JH
4928
4929In versions of Perl prior to 5.004 the default seed was just the
4930current C<time>. This isn't a particularly good seed, so many old
4931programs supply their own seed value (often C<time ^ $$> or C<time ^
4932($$ + ($$ << 15))>), but that isn't necessary any more.
93dc8474 4933
2f9daede
TP
4934Note that you need something much more random than the default seed for
4935cryptographic purposes. Checksumming the compressed output of one or more
4936rapidly changing operating system status programs is the usual method. For
4937example:
28757baa 4938
4939 srand (time ^ $$ ^ unpack "%L*", `ps axww | gzip`);
4940
7660c0ab 4941If you're particularly concerned with this, see the C<Math::TrulyRandom>
0078ec44
RS
4942module in CPAN.
4943
54310121 4944Frequently called programs (like CGI scripts) that simply use
28757baa 4945
4946 time ^ $$
4947
54310121 4948for a seed can fall prey to the mathematical property that
28757baa 4949
4950 a^b == (a+1)^(b+1)
4951
0078ec44 4952one-third of the time. So don't do that.
f86702cc 4953
a0d0e21e
LW
4954=item stat FILEHANDLE
4955
4956=item stat EXPR
4957
54310121 4958=item stat
bbce6d69 4959
1d2dff63
GS
4960Returns a 13-element list giving the status info for a file, either
4961the file opened via FILEHANDLE, or named by EXPR. If EXPR is omitted,
7660c0ab 4962it stats C<$_>. Returns a null list if the stat fails. Typically used
1d2dff63 4963as follows:
a0d0e21e
LW
4964
4965 ($dev,$ino,$mode,$nlink,$uid,$gid,$rdev,$size,
4966 $atime,$mtime,$ctime,$blksize,$blocks)
4967 = stat($filename);
4968
54310121 4969Not all fields are supported on all filesystem types. Here are the
c07a80fd 4970meaning of the fields:
4971
54310121 4972 0 dev device number of filesystem
4973 1 ino inode number
4974 2 mode file mode (type and permissions)
4975 3 nlink number of (hard) links to the file
4976 4 uid numeric user ID of file's owner
4977 5 gid numeric group ID of file's owner
4978 6 rdev the device identifier (special files only)
4979 7 size total size of file, in bytes
1c74f1bd
GS
4980 8 atime last access time in seconds since the epoch
4981 9 mtime last modify time in seconds since the epoch
4982 10 ctime inode change time (NOT creation time!) in seconds since the epoch
54310121 4983 11 blksize preferred block size for file system I/O
4984 12 blocks actual number of blocks allocated
c07a80fd 4985
4986(The epoch was at 00:00 January 1, 1970 GMT.)
4987
a0d0e21e
LW
4988If stat is passed the special filehandle consisting of an underline, no
4989stat is done, but the current contents of the stat structure from the
4990last stat or filetest are returned. Example:
4991
4992 if (-x $file && (($d) = stat(_)) && $d < 0) {
4993 print "$file is executable NFS file\n";
4994 }
4995
ca6e1c26
JH
4996(This works on machines only for which the device number is negative
4997under NFS.)
a0d0e21e 4998
2b5ab1e7 4999Because the mode contains both the file type and its permissions, you
b76cc8ba 5000should mask off the file type portion and (s)printf using a C<"%o">
2b5ab1e7
TC
5001if you want to see the real permissions.
5002
5003 $mode = (stat($filename))[2];
5004 printf "Permissions are %04o\n", $mode & 07777;
5005
19799a22 5006In scalar context, C<stat> returns a boolean value indicating success
1d2dff63
GS
5007or failure, and, if successful, sets the information associated with
5008the special filehandle C<_>.
5009
2b5ab1e7
TC
5010The File::stat module provides a convenient, by-name access mechanism:
5011
5012 use File::stat;
5013 $sb = stat($filename);
b76cc8ba 5014 printf "File is %s, size is %s, perm %04o, mtime %s\n",
2b5ab1e7
TC
5015 $filename, $sb->size, $sb->mode & 07777,
5016 scalar localtime $sb->mtime;
5017
ca6e1c26
JH
5018You can import symbolic mode constants (C<S_IF*>) and functions
5019(C<S_IS*>) from the Fcntl module:
5020
5021 use Fcntl ':mode';
5022
5023 $mode = (stat($filename))[2];
5024
5025 $user_rwx = ($mode & S_IRWXU) >> 6;
5026 $group_read = ($mode & S_IRGRP) >> 3;
5027 $other_execute = $mode & S_IXOTH;
5028
5029 printf "Permissions are %04o\n", S_ISMODE($mode), "\n";
5030
5031 $is_setuid = $mode & S_ISUID;
5032 $is_setgid = S_ISDIR($mode);
5033
5034You could write the last two using the C<-u> and C<-d> operators.
5035The commonly available S_IF* constants are
5036
5037 # Permissions: read, write, execute, for user, group, others.
5038
5039 S_IRWXU S_IRUSR S_IWUSR S_IXUSR
5040 S_IRWXG S_IRGRP S_IWGRP S_IXGRP
5041 S_IRWXO S_IROTH S_IWOTH S_IXOTH
61eff3bc 5042
ca6e1c26
JH
5043 # Setuid/Setgid/Stickiness.
5044
5045 S_ISUID S_ISGID S_ISVTX S_ISTXT
5046
5047 # File types. Not necessarily all are available on your system.
5048
5049 S_IFREG S_IFDIR S_IFLNK S_IFBLK S_ISCHR S_IFIFO S_IFSOCK S_IFWHT S_ENFMT
5050
5051 # The following are compatibility aliases for S_IRUSR, S_IWUSR, S_IXUSR.
5052
5053 S_IREAD S_IWRITE S_IEXEC
5054
5055and the S_IF* functions are
5056
4375e838 5057 S_IFMODE($mode) the part of $mode containing the permission bits
ca6e1c26
JH
5058 and the setuid/setgid/sticky bits
5059
5060 S_IFMT($mode) the part of $mode containing the file type
b76cc8ba 5061 which can be bit-anded with e.g. S_IFREG
ca6e1c26
JH
5062 or with the following functions
5063
5064 # The operators -f, -d, -l, -b, -c, -p, and -s.
5065
5066 S_ISREG($mode) S_ISDIR($mode) S_ISLNK($mode)
5067 S_ISBLK($mode) S_ISCHR($mode) S_ISFIFO($mode) S_ISSOCK($mode)
5068
5069 # No direct -X operator counterpart, but for the first one
5070 # the -g operator is often equivalent. The ENFMT stands for
5071 # record flocking enforcement, a platform-dependent feature.
5072
5073 S_ISENFMT($mode) S_ISWHT($mode)
5074
5075See your native chmod(2) and stat(2) documentation for more details
5076about the S_* constants.
5077
a0d0e21e
LW
5078=item study SCALAR
5079
5080=item study
5081
184e9718 5082Takes extra time to study SCALAR (C<$_> if unspecified) in anticipation of
a0d0e21e
LW
5083doing many pattern matches on the string before it is next modified.
5084This may or may not save time, depending on the nature and number of
5085patterns you are searching on, and on the distribution of character
19799a22 5086frequencies in the string to be searched--you probably want to compare
5f05dabc 5087run times with and without it to see which runs faster. Those loops
a0d0e21e
LW
5088which scan for many short constant strings (including the constant
5089parts of more complex patterns) will benefit most. You may have only
19799a22
GS
5090one C<study> active at a time--if you study a different scalar the first
5091is "unstudied". (The way C<study> works is this: a linked list of every
a0d0e21e 5092character in the string to be searched is made, so we know, for
7660c0ab 5093example, where all the C<'k'> characters are. From each search string,
a0d0e21e
LW
5094the rarest character is selected, based on some static frequency tables
5095constructed from some C programs and English text. Only those places
5096that contain this "rarest" character are examined.)
5097
5a964f20 5098For example, here is a loop that inserts index producing entries
a0d0e21e
LW
5099before any line containing a certain pattern:
5100
5101 while (<>) {
5102 study;
2b5ab1e7
TC
5103 print ".IX foo\n" if /\bfoo\b/;
5104 print ".IX bar\n" if /\bbar\b/;
5105 print ".IX blurfl\n" if /\bblurfl\b/;
5a964f20 5106 # ...
a0d0e21e
LW
5107 print;
5108 }
5109
951ba7fe
GS
5110In searching for C</\bfoo\b/>, only those locations in C<$_> that contain C<f>
5111will be looked at, because C<f> is rarer than C<o>. In general, this is
a0d0e21e
LW
5112a big win except in pathological cases. The only question is whether
5113it saves you more time than it took to build the linked list in the
5114first place.
5115
5116Note that if you have to look for strings that you don't know till
19799a22 5117runtime, you can build an entire loop as a string and C<eval> that to
a0d0e21e 5118avoid recompiling all your patterns all the time. Together with
7660c0ab 5119undefining C<$/> to input entire files as one record, this can be very
f86cebdf 5120fast, often faster than specialized programs like fgrep(1). The following
184e9718 5121scans a list of files (C<@files>) for a list of words (C<@words>), and prints
a0d0e21e
LW
5122out the names of those files that contain a match:
5123
5124 $search = 'while (<>) { study;';
5125 foreach $word (@words) {
5126 $search .= "++\$seen{\$ARGV} if /\\b$word\\b/;\n";
5127 }
5128 $search .= "}";
5129 @ARGV = @files;
5130 undef $/;
5131 eval $search; # this screams
5f05dabc 5132 $/ = "\n"; # put back to normal input delimiter
a0d0e21e
LW
5133 foreach $file (sort keys(%seen)) {
5134 print $file, "\n";
5135 }
5136
cb1a09d0
AD
5137=item sub BLOCK
5138
5139=item sub NAME
5140
5141=item sub NAME BLOCK
5142
5143This is subroutine definition, not a real function I<per se>. With just a
09bef843
SB
5144NAME (and possibly prototypes or attributes), it's just a forward declaration.
5145Without a NAME, it's an anonymous function declaration, and does actually
5146return a value: the CODE ref of the closure you just created. See L<perlsub>
5147and L<perlref> for details.
cb1a09d0 5148
87275199 5149=item substr EXPR,OFFSET,LENGTH,REPLACEMENT
7b8d334a 5150
87275199 5151=item substr EXPR,OFFSET,LENGTH
a0d0e21e
LW
5152
5153=item substr EXPR,OFFSET
5154
5155Extracts a substring out of EXPR and returns it. First character is at
7660c0ab 5156offset C<0>, or whatever you've set C<$[> to (but don't do that).
84902520 5157If OFFSET is negative (or more precisely, less than C<$[>), starts
87275199
GS
5158that far from the end of the string. If LENGTH is omitted, returns
5159everything to the end of the string. If LENGTH is negative, leaves that
748a9306
LW
5160many characters off the end of the string.
5161
2b5ab1e7 5162You can use the substr() function as an lvalue, in which case EXPR
87275199
GS
5163must itself be an lvalue. If you assign something shorter than LENGTH,
5164the string will shrink, and if you assign something longer than LENGTH,
2b5ab1e7 5165the string will grow to accommodate it. To keep the string the same
19799a22 5166length you may need to pad or chop your value using C<sprintf>.
a0d0e21e 5167
87275199
GS
5168If OFFSET and LENGTH specify a substring that is partly outside the
5169string, only the part within the string is returned. If the substring
5170is beyond either end of the string, substr() returns the undefined
5171value and produces a warning. When used as an lvalue, specifying a
5172substring that is entirely outside the string is a fatal error.
5173Here's an example showing the behavior for boundary cases:
5174
5175 my $name = 'fred';
5176 substr($name, 4) = 'dy'; # $name is now 'freddy'
5177 my $null = substr $name, 6, 2; # returns '' (no warning)
5178 my $oops = substr $name, 7; # returns undef, with warning
5179 substr($name, 7) = 'gap'; # fatal error
5180
2b5ab1e7 5181An alternative to using substr() as an lvalue is to specify the
7b8d334a 5182replacement string as the 4th argument. This allows you to replace
2b5ab1e7
TC
5183parts of the EXPR and return what was there before in one operation,
5184just as you can with splice().
7b8d334a 5185
a0d0e21e
LW
5186=item symlink OLDFILE,NEWFILE
5187
5188Creates a new filename symbolically linked to the old filename.
7660c0ab 5189Returns C<1> for success, C<0> otherwise. On systems that don't support
a0d0e21e
LW
5190symbolic links, produces a fatal error at run time. To check for that,
5191use eval:
5192
2b5ab1e7 5193 $symlink_exists = eval { symlink("",""); 1 };
a0d0e21e
LW
5194
5195=item syscall LIST
5196
5197Calls the system call specified as the first element of the list,
5198passing the remaining elements as arguments to the system call. If
5199unimplemented, produces a fatal error. The arguments are interpreted
5200as follows: if a given argument is numeric, the argument is passed as
5201an int. If not, the pointer to the string value is passed. You are
5202responsible to make sure a string is pre-extended long enough to
a3cb178b 5203receive any result that might be written into a string. You can't use a
19799a22 5204string literal (or other read-only string) as an argument to C<syscall>
a3cb178b
GS
5205because Perl has to assume that any string pointer might be written
5206through. If your
a0d0e21e 5207integer arguments are not literals and have never been interpreted in a
7660c0ab 5208numeric context, you may need to add C<0> to them to force them to look
19799a22 5209like numbers. This emulates the C<syswrite> function (or vice versa):
a0d0e21e
LW
5210
5211 require 'syscall.ph'; # may need to run h2ph
a3cb178b
GS
5212 $s = "hi there\n";
5213 syscall(&SYS_write, fileno(STDOUT), $s, length $s);
a0d0e21e 5214
5f05dabc 5215Note that Perl supports passing of up to only 14 arguments to your system call,
a0d0e21e
LW
5216which in practice should usually suffice.
5217
fb73857a 5218Syscall returns whatever value returned by the system call it calls.
19799a22 5219If the system call fails, C<syscall> returns C<-1> and sets C<$!> (errno).
7660c0ab 5220Note that some system calls can legitimately return C<-1>. The proper
fb73857a 5221way to handle such calls is to assign C<$!=0;> before the call and
7660c0ab 5222check the value of C<$!> if syscall returns C<-1>.
fb73857a 5223
5224There's a problem with C<syscall(&SYS_pipe)>: it returns the file
5225number of the read end of the pipe it creates. There is no way
b76cc8ba 5226to retrieve the file number of the other end. You can avoid this
19799a22 5227problem by using C<pipe> instead.
fb73857a 5228
c07a80fd 5229=item sysopen FILEHANDLE,FILENAME,MODE
5230
5231=item sysopen FILEHANDLE,FILENAME,MODE,PERMS
5232
5233Opens the file whose filename is given by FILENAME, and associates it
5234with FILEHANDLE. If FILEHANDLE is an expression, its value is used as
5235the name of the real filehandle wanted. This function calls the
19799a22 5236underlying operating system's C<open> function with the parameters
c07a80fd 5237FILENAME, MODE, PERMS.
5238
5239The possible values and flag bits of the MODE parameter are
5240system-dependent; they are available via the standard module C<Fcntl>.
ea2b5ef6
JH
5241See the documentation of your operating system's C<open> to see which
5242values and flag bits are available. You may combine several flags
5243using the C<|>-operator.
5244
5245Some of the most common values are C<O_RDONLY> for opening the file in
5246read-only mode, C<O_WRONLY> for opening the file in write-only mode,
5247and C<O_RDWR> for opening the file in read-write mode, and.
5248
adf5897a
DF
5249For historical reasons, some values work on almost every system
5250supported by perl: zero means read-only, one means write-only, and two
5251means read/write. We know that these values do I<not> work under
7c5ffed3 5252OS/390 & VM/ESA Unix and on the Macintosh; you probably don't want to
4af147f6 5253use them in new code.
c07a80fd 5254
19799a22 5255If the file named by FILENAME does not exist and the C<open> call creates
7660c0ab 5256it (typically because MODE includes the C<O_CREAT> flag), then the value of
5a964f20 5257PERMS specifies the permissions of the newly created file. If you omit
19799a22 5258the PERMS argument to C<sysopen>, Perl uses the octal value C<0666>.
5a964f20 5259These permission values need to be in octal, and are modified by your
0591cd52
NT
5260process's current C<umask>.
5261
ea2b5ef6
JH
5262In many systems the C<O_EXCL> flag is available for opening files in
5263exclusive mode. This is B<not> locking: exclusiveness means here that
5264if the file already exists, sysopen() fails. The C<O_EXCL> wins
5265C<O_TRUNC>.
5266
5267Sometimes you may want to truncate an already-existing file: C<O_TRUNC>.
5268
19799a22 5269You should seldom if ever use C<0644> as argument to C<sysopen>, because
2b5ab1e7
TC
5270that takes away the user's option to have a more permissive umask.
5271Better to omit it. See the perlfunc(1) entry on C<umask> for more
5272on this.
c07a80fd 5273
4af147f6
CS
5274Note that C<sysopen> depends on the fdopen() C library function.
5275On many UNIX systems, fdopen() is known to fail when file descriptors
5276exceed a certain value, typically 255. If you need more file
5277descriptors than that, consider rebuilding Perl to use the C<sfio>
5278library, or perhaps using the POSIX::open() function.
5279
2b5ab1e7 5280See L<perlopentut> for a kinder, gentler explanation of opening files.
28757baa 5281
a0d0e21e
LW
5282=item sysread FILEHANDLE,SCALAR,LENGTH,OFFSET
5283
5284=item sysread FILEHANDLE,SCALAR,LENGTH
5285
9124316e
JH
5286Attempts to read LENGTH I<characters> of data into variable SCALAR from
5287the specified FILEHANDLE, using the system call read(2). It bypasses
5288buffered IO, so mixing this with other kinds of reads, C<print>,
5289C<write>, C<seek>, C<tell>, or C<eof> can cause confusion because
5290stdio usually buffers data. Returns the number of characters actually
5291read, C<0> at end of file, or undef if there was an error. SCALAR
5292will be grown or shrunk so that the last byte actually read is the
5293last byte of the scalar after the read.
5294
5295Note the I<characters>: depending on the status of the filehandle,
5296either (8-bit) bytes or characters are read. By default all
5297filehandles operate on bytes, but for example if the filehandle has
5298been opened with the C<:utf8> discipline (see L</open>, and the C<open>
5299pragma, L<open>), the I/O will operate on characters, not bytes.
ff68c719 5300
5301An OFFSET may be specified to place the read data at some place in the
5302string other than the beginning. A negative OFFSET specifies
9124316e
JH
5303placement at that many characters counting backwards from the end of
5304the string. A positive OFFSET greater than the length of SCALAR
5305results in the string being padded to the required size with C<"\0">
5306bytes before the result of the read is appended.
a0d0e21e 5307
2b5ab1e7
TC
5308There is no syseof() function, which is ok, since eof() doesn't work
5309very well on device files (like ttys) anyway. Use sysread() and check
19799a22 5310for a return value for 0 to decide whether you're done.
2b5ab1e7 5311
137443ea 5312=item sysseek FILEHANDLE,POSITION,WHENCE
5313
9124316e
JH
5314Sets FILEHANDLE's system position I<in bytes> using the system call
5315lseek(2). FILEHANDLE may be an expression whose value gives the name
5316of the filehandle. The values for WHENCE are C<0> to set the new
5317position to POSITION, C<1> to set the it to the current position plus
5318POSITION, and C<2> to set it to EOF plus POSITION (typically
5319negative).
5320
5321Note the I<in bytes>: even if the filehandle has been set to operate
5322on characters (for example by using the C<:utf8> discipline), tell()
5323will return byte offsets, not character offsets (because implementing
5324that would render sysseek() very slow).
5325
5326sysseek() bypasses normal buffered io, so mixing this with reads (other
5327than C<sysread>, for example &gt;&lt or read()) C<print>, C<write>,
5328C<seek>, C<tell>, or C<eof> may cause confusion.
86989e5d
JH
5329
5330For WHENCE, you may also use the constants C<SEEK_SET>, C<SEEK_CUR>,
5331and C<SEEK_END> (start of the file, current position, end of the file)
5332from the Fcntl module. Use of the constants is also more portable
5333than relying on 0, 1, and 2. For example to define a "systell" function:
5334
5335 use Fnctl 'SEEK_CUR';
5336 sub systell { sysseek($_[0], 0, SEEK_CUR) }
8903cb82 5337
5338Returns the new position, or the undefined value on failure. A position
19799a22
GS
5339of zero is returned as the string C<"0 but true">; thus C<sysseek> returns
5340true on success and false on failure, yet you can still easily determine
8903cb82 5341the new position.
137443ea 5342
a0d0e21e
LW
5343=item system LIST
5344
8bf3b016
GS
5345=item system PROGRAM LIST
5346
19799a22
GS
5347Does exactly the same thing as C<exec LIST>, except that a fork is
5348done first, and the parent process waits for the child process to
5349complete. Note that argument processing varies depending on the
5350number of arguments. If there is more than one argument in LIST,
5351or if LIST is an array with more than one value, starts the program
5352given by the first element of the list with arguments given by the
5353rest of the list. If there is only one scalar argument, the argument
5354is checked for shell metacharacters, and if there are any, the
5355entire argument is passed to the system's command shell for parsing
5356(this is C</bin/sh -c> on Unix platforms, but varies on other
5357platforms). If there are no shell metacharacters in the argument,
5358it is split into words and passed directly to C<execvp>, which is
5359more efficient.
5360
0f897271
GS
5361Beginning with v5.6.0, Perl will attempt to flush all files opened for
5362output before any operation that may do a fork, but this may not be
5363supported on some platforms (see L<perlport>). To be safe, you may need
5364to set C<$|> ($AUTOFLUSH in English) or call the C<autoflush()> method
5365of C<IO::Handle> on any open handles.
a2008d6d
GS
5366
5367The return value is the exit status of the program as
19799a22
GS
5368returned by the C<wait> call. To get the actual exit value divide by
5369256. See also L</exec>. This is I<not> what you want to use to capture
54310121 5370the output from a command, for that you should use merely backticks or
d5a9bfb0
IZ
5371C<qx//>, as described in L<perlop/"`STRING`">. Return value of -1
5372indicates a failure to start the program (inspect $! for the reason).
a0d0e21e 5373
19799a22
GS
5374Like C<exec>, C<system> allows you to lie to a program about its name if
5375you use the C<system PROGRAM LIST> syntax. Again, see L</exec>.
8bf3b016 5376
19799a22 5377Because C<system> and backticks block C<SIGINT> and C<SIGQUIT>, killing the
28757baa 5378program they're running doesn't actually interrupt your program.
5379
5380 @args = ("command", "arg1", "arg2");
54310121 5381 system(@args) == 0
5382 or die "system @args failed: $?"
28757baa 5383
5a964f20
TC
5384You can check all the failure possibilities by inspecting
5385C<$?> like this:
28757baa 5386
5a964f20
TC
5387 $exit_value = $? >> 8;
5388 $signal_num = $? & 127;
5389 $dumped_core = $? & 128;
f86702cc 5390
c8db1d39
TC
5391When the arguments get executed via the system shell, results
5392and return codes will be subject to its quirks and capabilities.
5393See L<perlop/"`STRING`"> and L</exec> for details.
bb32b41a 5394
a0d0e21e
LW
5395=item syswrite FILEHANDLE,SCALAR,LENGTH,OFFSET
5396
5397=item syswrite FILEHANDLE,SCALAR,LENGTH
5398
145d37e2
GA
5399=item syswrite FILEHANDLE,SCALAR
5400
9124316e
JH
5401Attempts to write LENGTH characters of data from variable SCALAR to
5402the specified FILEHANDLE, using the system call write(2). If LENGTH
5403is not specified, writes whole SCALAR. It bypasses buffered IO, so
5404mixing this with reads (other than C<sysread())>, C<print>, C<write>,
5405C<seek>, C<tell>, or C<eof> may cause confusion because stdio usually
5406buffers data. Returns the number of characters actually written, or
5407C<undef> if there was an error. If the LENGTH is greater than the
5408available data in the SCALAR after the OFFSET, only as much data as is
5409available will be written.
ff68c719 5410
5411An OFFSET may be specified to write the data from some part of the
5412string other than the beginning. A negative OFFSET specifies writing
9124316e
JH
5413that many characters counting backwards from the end of the string.
5414In the case the SCALAR is empty you can use OFFSET but only zero offset.
5415
5416Note the I<characters>: depending on the status of the filehandle,
5417either (8-bit) bytes or characters are written. By default all
5418filehandles operate on bytes, but for example if the filehandle has
5419been opened with the C<:utf8> discipline (see L</open>, and the open
5420pragma, L<open>), the I/O will operate on characters, not bytes.
a0d0e21e
LW
5421
5422=item tell FILEHANDLE
5423
5424=item tell
5425
9124316e
JH
5426Returns the current position I<in bytes> for FILEHANDLE, or -1 on
5427error. FILEHANDLE may be an expression whose value gives the name of
5428the actual filehandle. If FILEHANDLE is omitted, assumes the file
5429last read.
5430
5431Note the I<in bytes>: even if the filehandle has been set to
5432operate on characters (for example by using the C<:utf8> open
5433discipline), tell() will return byte offsets, not character offsets
5434(because that would render seek() and tell() rather slow).
2b5ab1e7 5435
cfd73201
JH
5436The return value of tell() for the standard streams like the STDIN
5437depends on the operating system: it may return -1 or something else.
5438tell() on pipes, fifos, and sockets usually returns -1.
5439
19799a22 5440There is no C<systell> function. Use C<sysseek(FH, 0, 1)> for that.
a0d0e21e 5441
9124316e
JH
5442Do not use tell() on a filehandle that has been opened using
5443sysopen(), use sysseek() for that as described above. Why? Because
5444sysopen() creates unbuffered, "raw", filehandles, while open() creates
5445buffered filehandles. sysseek() make sense only on the first kind,
5446tell() only makes sense on the second kind.
5447
a0d0e21e
LW
5448=item telldir DIRHANDLE
5449
19799a22
GS
5450Returns the current position of the C<readdir> routines on DIRHANDLE.
5451Value may be given to C<seekdir> to access a particular location in a
a0d0e21e
LW
5452directory. Has the same caveats about possible directory compaction as
5453the corresponding system library routine.
5454
4633a7c4 5455=item tie VARIABLE,CLASSNAME,LIST
a0d0e21e 5456
4633a7c4
LW
5457This function binds a variable to a package class that will provide the
5458implementation for the variable. VARIABLE is the name of the variable
5459to be enchanted. CLASSNAME is the name of a class implementing objects
19799a22 5460of correct type. Any additional arguments are passed to the C<new>
8a059744
GS
5461method of the class (meaning C<TIESCALAR>, C<TIEHANDLE>, C<TIEARRAY>,
5462or C<TIEHASH>). Typically these are arguments such as might be passed
19799a22
GS
5463to the C<dbm_open()> function of C. The object returned by the C<new>
5464method is also returned by the C<tie> function, which would be useful
8a059744 5465if you want to access other methods in CLASSNAME.
a0d0e21e 5466
19799a22 5467Note that functions such as C<keys> and C<values> may return huge lists
1d2dff63 5468when used on large objects, like DBM files. You may prefer to use the
19799a22 5469C<each> function to iterate over such. Example:
a0d0e21e
LW
5470
5471 # print out history file offsets
4633a7c4 5472 use NDBM_File;
da0045b7 5473 tie(%HIST, 'NDBM_File', '/usr/lib/news/history', 1, 0);
a0d0e21e
LW
5474 while (($key,$val) = each %HIST) {
5475 print $key, ' = ', unpack('L',$val), "\n";
5476 }
5477 untie(%HIST);
5478
aa689395 5479A class implementing a hash should have the following methods:
a0d0e21e 5480
4633a7c4 5481 TIEHASH classname, LIST
a0d0e21e
LW
5482 FETCH this, key
5483 STORE this, key, value
5484 DELETE this, key
8a059744 5485 CLEAR this
a0d0e21e
LW
5486 EXISTS this, key
5487 FIRSTKEY this
5488 NEXTKEY this, lastkey
8a059744 5489 DESTROY this
d7da42b7 5490 UNTIE this
a0d0e21e 5491
4633a7c4 5492A class implementing an ordinary array should have the following methods:
a0d0e21e 5493
4633a7c4 5494 TIEARRAY classname, LIST
a0d0e21e
LW
5495 FETCH this, key
5496 STORE this, key, value
8a059744
GS
5497 FETCHSIZE this
5498 STORESIZE this, count
5499 CLEAR this
5500 PUSH this, LIST
5501 POP this
5502 SHIFT this
5503 UNSHIFT this, LIST
5504 SPLICE this, offset, length, LIST
5505 EXTEND this, count
5506 DESTROY this
d7da42b7 5507 UNTIE this
8a059744
GS
5508
5509A class implementing a file handle should have the following methods:
5510
5511 TIEHANDLE classname, LIST
5512 READ this, scalar, length, offset
5513 READLINE this
5514 GETC this
5515 WRITE this, scalar, length, offset
5516 PRINT this, LIST
5517 PRINTF this, format, LIST
e08f2115
GA
5518 BINMODE this
5519 EOF this
5520 FILENO this
5521 SEEK this, position, whence
5522 TELL this
5523 OPEN this, mode, LIST
8a059744
GS
5524 CLOSE this
5525 DESTROY this
d7da42b7 5526 UNTIE this
a0d0e21e 5527
4633a7c4 5528A class implementing a scalar should have the following methods:
a0d0e21e 5529
4633a7c4 5530 TIESCALAR classname, LIST
54310121 5531 FETCH this,
a0d0e21e 5532 STORE this, value
8a059744 5533 DESTROY this
d7da42b7 5534 UNTIE this
8a059744
GS
5535
5536Not all methods indicated above need be implemented. See L<perltie>,
2b5ab1e7 5537L<Tie::Hash>, L<Tie::Array>, L<Tie::Scalar>, and L<Tie::Handle>.
a0d0e21e 5538
19799a22 5539Unlike C<dbmopen>, the C<tie> function will not use or require a module
4633a7c4 5540for you--you need to do that explicitly yourself. See L<DB_File>
19799a22 5541or the F<Config> module for interesting C<tie> implementations.
4633a7c4 5542
b687b08b 5543For further details see L<perltie>, L<"tied VARIABLE">.
cc6b7395 5544
f3cbc334
RS
5545=item tied VARIABLE
5546
5547Returns a reference to the object underlying VARIABLE (the same value
19799a22 5548that was originally returned by the C<tie> call that bound the variable
f3cbc334
RS
5549to a package.) Returns the undefined value if VARIABLE isn't tied to a
5550package.
5551
a0d0e21e
LW
5552=item time
5553
da0045b7 5554Returns the number of non-leap seconds since whatever time the system
5555considers to be the epoch (that's 00:00:00, January 1, 1904 for MacOS,
5556and 00:00:00 UTC, January 1, 1970 for most other systems).
19799a22 5557Suitable for feeding to C<gmtime> and C<localtime>.
a0d0e21e 5558
68f8bed4
JH
5559For measuring time in better granularity than one second,
5560you may use either the Time::HiRes module from CPAN, or
5561if you have gettimeofday(2), you may be able to use the
5562C<syscall> interface of Perl, see L<perlfaq8> for details.
5563
a0d0e21e
LW
5564=item times
5565
1d2dff63 5566Returns a four-element list giving the user and system times, in
a0d0e21e
LW
5567seconds, for this process and the children of this process.
5568
5569 ($user,$system,$cuser,$csystem) = times;
5570
dc19f4fb
MJD
5571In scalar context, C<times> returns C<$user>.
5572
a0d0e21e
LW
5573=item tr///
5574
19799a22 5575The transliteration operator. Same as C<y///>. See L<perlop>.
a0d0e21e
LW
5576
5577=item truncate FILEHANDLE,LENGTH
5578
5579=item truncate EXPR,LENGTH
5580
5581Truncates the file opened on FILEHANDLE, or named by EXPR, to the
5582specified length. Produces a fatal error if truncate isn't implemented
19799a22 5583on your system. Returns true if successful, the undefined value
a3cb178b 5584otherwise.
a0d0e21e
LW
5585
5586=item uc EXPR
5587
54310121 5588=item uc
bbce6d69 5589
a0d0e21e 5590Returns an uppercased version of EXPR. This is the internal function
ad0029c4
JH
5591implementing the C<\U> escape in double-quoted strings. Respects
5592current LC_CTYPE locale if C<use locale> in force. See L<perllocale>
983ffd37
JH
5593and L<perlunicode> for more details about locale and Unicode support.
5594It does not attempt to do titlecase mapping on initial letters. See
5595C<ucfirst> for that.
a0d0e21e 5596
7660c0ab 5597If EXPR is omitted, uses C<$_>.
bbce6d69 5598
a0d0e21e
LW
5599=item ucfirst EXPR
5600
54310121 5601=item ucfirst
bbce6d69 5602
ad0029c4
JH
5603Returns the value of EXPR with the first character in uppercase
5604(titlecase in Unicode). This is the internal function implementing
5605the C<\u> escape in double-quoted strings. Respects current LC_CTYPE
983ffd37
JH
5606locale if C<use locale> in force. See L<perllocale> and L<perlunicode>
5607for more details about locale and Unicode support.
a0d0e21e 5608
7660c0ab 5609If EXPR is omitted, uses C<$_>.
bbce6d69 5610
a0d0e21e
LW
5611=item umask EXPR
5612
5613=item umask
5614
2f9daede 5615Sets the umask for the process to EXPR and returns the previous value.
eec2d3df
GS
5616If EXPR is omitted, merely returns the current umask.
5617
0591cd52
NT
5618The Unix permission C<rwxr-x---> is represented as three sets of three
5619bits, or three octal digits: C<0750> (the leading 0 indicates octal
b5a41e52 5620and isn't one of the digits). The C<umask> value is such a number
0591cd52
NT
5621representing disabled permissions bits. The permission (or "mode")
5622values you pass C<mkdir> or C<sysopen> are modified by your umask, so
5623even if you tell C<sysopen> to create a file with permissions C<0777>,
5624if your umask is C<0022> then the file will actually be created with
5625permissions C<0755>. If your C<umask> were C<0027> (group can't
5626write; others can't read, write, or execute), then passing
19799a22 5627C<sysopen> C<0666> would create a file with mode C<0640> (C<0666 &~
0591cd52
NT
5628027> is C<0640>).
5629
5630Here's some advice: supply a creation mode of C<0666> for regular
19799a22
GS
5631files (in C<sysopen>) and one of C<0777> for directories (in
5632C<mkdir>) and executable files. This gives users the freedom of
0591cd52
NT
5633choice: if they want protected files, they might choose process umasks
5634of C<022>, C<027>, or even the particularly antisocial mask of C<077>.
5635Programs should rarely if ever make policy decisions better left to
5636the user. The exception to this is when writing files that should be
5637kept private: mail files, web browser cookies, I<.rhosts> files, and
5638so on.
5639
f86cebdf 5640If umask(2) is not implemented on your system and you are trying to
eec2d3df 5641restrict access for I<yourself> (i.e., (EXPR & 0700) > 0), produces a
f86cebdf 5642fatal error at run time. If umask(2) is not implemented and you are
eec2d3df
GS
5643not trying to restrict access for yourself, returns C<undef>.
5644
5645Remember that a umask is a number, usually given in octal; it is I<not> a
5646string of octal digits. See also L</oct>, if all you have is a string.
a0d0e21e
LW
5647
5648=item undef EXPR
5649
5650=item undef
5651
54310121 5652Undefines the value of EXPR, which must be an lvalue. Use only on a
19799a22
GS
5653scalar value, an array (using C<@>), a hash (using C<%>), a subroutine
5654(using C<&>), or a typeglob (using <*>). (Saying C<undef $hash{$key}>
20408e3c
GS
5655will probably not do what you expect on most predefined variables or
5656DBM list values, so don't do that; see L<delete>.) Always returns the
5657undefined value. You can omit the EXPR, in which case nothing is
5658undefined, but you still get an undefined value that you could, for
5659instance, return from a subroutine, assign to a variable or pass as a
5660parameter. Examples:
a0d0e21e
LW
5661
5662 undef $foo;
f86cebdf 5663 undef $bar{'blurfl'}; # Compare to: delete $bar{'blurfl'};
a0d0e21e 5664 undef @ary;
aa689395 5665 undef %hash;
a0d0e21e 5666 undef &mysub;
20408e3c 5667 undef *xyz; # destroys $xyz, @xyz, %xyz, &xyz, etc.
54310121 5668 return (wantarray ? (undef, $errmsg) : undef) if $they_blew_it;
2f9daede
TP
5669 select undef, undef, undef, 0.25;
5670 ($a, $b, undef, $c) = &foo; # Ignore third value returned
a0d0e21e 5671
5a964f20
TC
5672Note that this is a unary operator, not a list operator.
5673
a0d0e21e
LW
5674=item unlink LIST
5675
54310121 5676=item unlink
bbce6d69 5677
a0d0e21e
LW
5678Deletes a list of files. Returns the number of files successfully
5679deleted.
5680
5681 $cnt = unlink 'a', 'b', 'c';
5682 unlink @goners;
5683 unlink <*.bak>;
5684
19799a22 5685Note: C<unlink> will not delete directories unless you are superuser and
a0d0e21e
LW
5686the B<-U> flag is supplied to Perl. Even if these conditions are
5687met, be warned that unlinking a directory can inflict damage on your
19799a22 5688filesystem. Use C<rmdir> instead.
a0d0e21e 5689
7660c0ab 5690If LIST is omitted, uses C<$_>.
bbce6d69 5691
a0d0e21e
LW
5692=item unpack TEMPLATE,EXPR
5693
19799a22 5694C<unpack> does the reverse of C<pack>: it takes a string
2b6c5635 5695and expands it out into a list of values.
19799a22 5696(In scalar context, it returns merely the first value produced.)
2b6c5635
GS
5697
5698The string is broken into chunks described by the TEMPLATE. Each chunk
5699is converted separately to a value. Typically, either the string is a result
5700of C<pack>, or the bytes of the string represent a C structure of some
5701kind.
5702
19799a22 5703The TEMPLATE has the same format as in the C<pack> function.
a0d0e21e
LW
5704Here's a subroutine that does substring:
5705
5706 sub substr {
5a964f20 5707 my($what,$where,$howmuch) = @_;
a0d0e21e
LW
5708 unpack("x$where a$howmuch", $what);
5709 }
5710
5711and then there's
5712
5713 sub ordinal { unpack("c",$_[0]); } # same as ord()
5714
2b6c5635 5715In addition to fields allowed in pack(), you may prefix a field with
61eff3bc
JH
5716a %<number> to indicate that
5717you want a <number>-bit checksum of the items instead of the items
2b6c5635
GS
5718themselves. Default is a 16-bit checksum. Checksum is calculated by
5719summing numeric values of expanded values (for string fields the sum of
5720C<ord($char)> is taken, for bit fields the sum of zeroes and ones).
5721
5722For example, the following
a0d0e21e
LW
5723computes the same number as the System V sum program:
5724
19799a22
GS
5725 $checksum = do {
5726 local $/; # slurp!
5727 unpack("%32C*",<>) % 65535;
5728 };
a0d0e21e
LW
5729
5730The following efficiently counts the number of set bits in a bit vector:
5731
5732 $setbits = unpack("%32b*", $selectmask);
5733
951ba7fe 5734The C<p> and C<P> formats should be used with care. Since Perl
3160c391
GS
5735has no way of checking whether the value passed to C<unpack()>
5736corresponds to a valid memory location, passing a pointer value that's
5737not known to be valid is likely to have disastrous consequences.
5738
2b6c5635
GS
5739If the repeat count of a field is larger than what the remainder of
5740the input string allows, repeat count is decreased. If the input string
b76cc8ba 5741is longer than one described by the TEMPLATE, the rest is ignored.
2b6c5635 5742
851646ae 5743See L</pack> for more examples and notes.
5a929a98 5744
98293880
JH
5745=item untie VARIABLE
5746
19799a22 5747Breaks the binding between a variable and a package. (See C<tie>.)
98293880 5748
a0d0e21e
LW
5749=item unshift ARRAY,LIST
5750
19799a22 5751Does the opposite of a C<shift>. Or the opposite of a C<push>,
a0d0e21e
LW
5752depending on how you look at it. Prepends list to the front of the
5753array, and returns the new number of elements in the array.
5754
76e4c2bb 5755 unshift(@ARGV, '-e') unless $ARGV[0] =~ /^-/;
a0d0e21e
LW
5756
5757Note the LIST is prepended whole, not one element at a time, so the
19799a22 5758prepended elements stay in the same order. Use C<reverse> to do the
a0d0e21e
LW
5759reverse.
5760
f6c8478c
GS
5761=item use Module VERSION LIST
5762
5763=item use Module VERSION
5764
a0d0e21e
LW
5765=item use Module LIST
5766
5767=item use Module
5768
da0045b7 5769=item use VERSION
5770
a0d0e21e
LW
5771Imports some semantics into the current package from the named module,
5772generally by aliasing certain subroutine or variable names into your
5773package. It is exactly equivalent to
5774
5775 BEGIN { require Module; import Module LIST; }
5776
54310121 5777except that Module I<must> be a bareword.
da0045b7 5778
3b825e41
RK
5779VERSION may be either a numeric argument such as 5.006, which will be
5780compared to C<$]>, or a literal of the form v5.6.1, which will be compared
5781to C<$^V> (aka $PERL_VERSION. A fatal error is produced if VERSION is
5782greater than the version of the current Perl interpreter; Perl will not
5783attempt to parse the rest of the file. Compare with L</require>, which can
5784do a similar check at run time.
5785
5786Specifying VERSION as a literal of the form v5.6.1 should generally be
5787avoided, because it leads to misleading error messages under earlier
5788versions of Perl which do not support this syntax. The equivalent numeric
5789version should be used instead.
16070b82 5790
dd629d5b
GS
5791 use v5.6.1; # compile time version check
5792 use 5.6.1; # ditto
3b825e41 5793 use 5.006_001; # ditto; preferred for backwards compatibility
16070b82
GS
5794
5795This is often useful if you need to check the current Perl version before
5796C<use>ing library modules that have changed in incompatible ways from
5797older versions of Perl. (We try not to do this more than we have to.)
da0045b7 5798
19799a22 5799The C<BEGIN> forces the C<require> and C<import> to happen at compile time. The
7660c0ab 5800C<require> makes sure the module is loaded into memory if it hasn't been
19799a22
GS
5801yet. The C<import> is not a builtin--it's just an ordinary static method
5802call into the C<Module> package to tell the module to import the list of
a0d0e21e 5803features back into the current package. The module can implement its
19799a22
GS
5804C<import> method any way it likes, though most modules just choose to
5805derive their C<import> method via inheritance from the C<Exporter> class that
5806is defined in the C<Exporter> module. See L<Exporter>. If no C<import>
10696ff6 5807method can be found then the call is skipped.
cb1a09d0 5808
31686daf
JP
5809If you do not want to call the package's C<import> method (for instance,
5810to stop your namespace from being altered), explicitly supply the empty list:
cb1a09d0
AD
5811
5812 use Module ();
5813
5814That is exactly equivalent to
5815
5a964f20 5816 BEGIN { require Module }
a0d0e21e 5817
da0045b7 5818If the VERSION argument is present between Module and LIST, then the
71be2cbc 5819C<use> will call the VERSION method in class Module with the given
5820version as an argument. The default VERSION method, inherited from
44dcb63b 5821the UNIVERSAL class, croaks if the given version is larger than the
b76cc8ba 5822value of the variable C<$Module::VERSION>.
f6c8478c
GS
5823
5824Again, there is a distinction between omitting LIST (C<import> called
5825with no arguments) and an explicit empty LIST C<()> (C<import> not
5826called). Note that there is no comma after VERSION!
da0045b7 5827
a0d0e21e
LW
5828Because this is a wide-open interface, pragmas (compiler directives)
5829are also implemented this way. Currently implemented pragmas are:
5830
f3798619 5831 use constant;
4633a7c4 5832 use diagnostics;
f3798619 5833 use integer;
4438c4b7
JH
5834 use sigtrap qw(SEGV BUS);
5835 use strict qw(subs vars refs);
5836 use subs qw(afunc blurfl);
5837 use warnings qw(all);
58c7fc7c 5838 use sort qw(stable _quicksort _mergesort);
a0d0e21e 5839
19799a22 5840Some of these pseudo-modules import semantics into the current
5a964f20
TC
5841block scope (like C<strict> or C<integer>, unlike ordinary modules,
5842which import symbols into the current package (which are effective
5843through the end of the file).
a0d0e21e 5844
19799a22
GS
5845There's a corresponding C<no> command that unimports meanings imported
5846by C<use>, i.e., it calls C<unimport Module LIST> instead of C<import>.
a0d0e21e
LW
5847
5848 no integer;
5849 no strict 'refs';
4438c4b7 5850 no warnings;
a0d0e21e 5851
19799a22 5852If no C<unimport> method can be found the call fails with a fatal error.
55497cff 5853
ac634a9a 5854See L<perlmodlib> for a list of standard modules and pragmas. See L<perlrun>
31686daf
JP
5855for the C<-M> and C<-m> command-line options to perl that give C<use>
5856functionality from the command-line.
a0d0e21e
LW
5857
5858=item utime LIST
5859
5860Changes the access and modification times on each file of a list of
5861files. The first two elements of the list must be the NUMERICAL access
5862and modification times, in that order. Returns the number of files
46cdf678 5863successfully changed. The inode change time of each file is set
19799a22 5864to the current time. This code has the same effect as the C<touch>
a3cb178b 5865command if the files already exist:
a0d0e21e
LW
5866
5867 #!/usr/bin/perl
5868 $now = time;
5869 utime $now, $now, @ARGV;
5870
c6f7b413
RS
5871If the first two elements of the list are C<undef>, then the utime(2)
5872function in the C library will be called with a null second argument.
5873On most systems, this will set the file's access and modification
5874times to the current time. (i.e. equivalent to the example above.)
5875
5876 utime undef, undef, @ARGV;
5877
aa689395 5878=item values HASH
a0d0e21e 5879
1d2dff63
GS
5880Returns a list consisting of all the values of the named hash. (In a
5881scalar context, returns the number of values.) The values are
ab192400
GS
5882returned in an apparently random order. The actual random order is
5883subject to change in future versions of perl, but it is guaranteed to
19799a22 5884be the same order as either the C<keys> or C<each> function would
ab192400
GS
5885produce on the same (unmodified) hash.
5886
8ea1e5d4
GS
5887Note that the values are not copied, which means modifying them will
5888modify the contents of the hash:
2b5ab1e7 5889
8ea1e5d4
GS
5890 for (values %hash) { s/foo/bar/g } # modifies %hash values
5891 for (@hash{keys %hash}) { s/foo/bar/g } # same
2b5ab1e7
TC
5892
5893As a side effect, calling values() resets the HASH's internal iterator.
19799a22 5894See also C<keys>, C<each>, and C<sort>.
a0d0e21e
LW
5895
5896=item vec EXPR,OFFSET,BITS
5897
e69129f1
GS
5898Treats the string in EXPR as a bit vector made up of elements of
5899width BITS, and returns the value of the element specified by OFFSET
5900as an unsigned integer. BITS therefore specifies the number of bits
5901that are reserved for each element in the bit vector. This must
5902be a power of two from 1 to 32 (or 64, if your platform supports
5903that).
c5a0f51a 5904
b76cc8ba 5905If BITS is 8, "elements" coincide with bytes of the input string.
c73032f5
IZ
5906
5907If BITS is 16 or more, bytes of the input string are grouped into chunks
5908of size BITS/8, and each group is converted to a number as with
b1866b2d 5909pack()/unpack() with big-endian formats C<n>/C<N> (and analogously
c73032f5
IZ
5910for BITS==64). See L<"pack"> for details.
5911
5912If bits is 4 or less, the string is broken into bytes, then the bits
5913of each byte are broken into 8/BITS groups. Bits of a byte are
5914numbered in a little-endian-ish way, as in C<0x01>, C<0x02>,
5915C<0x04>, C<0x08>, C<0x10>, C<0x20>, C<0x40>, C<0x80>. For example,
5916breaking the single input byte C<chr(0x36)> into two groups gives a list
5917C<(0x6, 0x3)>; breaking it into 4 groups gives C<(0x2, 0x1, 0x3, 0x0)>.
5918
81e118e0
JH
5919C<vec> may also be assigned to, in which case parentheses are needed
5920to give the expression the correct precedence as in
22dc801b 5921
5922 vec($image, $max_x * $x + $y, 8) = 3;
a0d0e21e 5923
fe58ced6
MG
5924If the selected element is outside the string, the value 0 is returned.
5925If an element off the end of the string is written to, Perl will first
5926extend the string with sufficiently many zero bytes. It is an error
5927to try to write off the beginning of the string (i.e. negative OFFSET).
fac70343 5928
33b45480
SB
5929The string should not contain any character with the value > 255 (which
5930can only happen if you're using UTF8 encoding). If it does, it will be
5931treated as something which is not UTF8 encoded. When the C<vec> was
5932assigned to, other parts of your program will also no longer consider the
5933string to be UTF8 encoded. In other words, if you do have such characters
5934in your string, vec() will operate on the actual byte string, and not the
5935conceptual character string.
246fae53 5936
fac70343
GS
5937Strings created with C<vec> can also be manipulated with the logical
5938operators C<|>, C<&>, C<^>, and C<~>. These operators will assume a bit
5939vector operation is desired when both operands are strings.
c5a0f51a 5940See L<perlop/"Bitwise String Operators">.
a0d0e21e 5941
7660c0ab 5942The following code will build up an ASCII string saying C<'PerlPerlPerl'>.
19799a22 5943The comments show the string after each step. Note that this code works
cca87523
GS
5944in the same way on big-endian or little-endian machines.
5945
5946 my $foo = '';
5947 vec($foo, 0, 32) = 0x5065726C; # 'Perl'
e69129f1
GS
5948
5949 # $foo eq "Perl" eq "\x50\x65\x72\x6C", 32 bits
5950 print vec($foo, 0, 8); # prints 80 == 0x50 == ord('P')
5951
cca87523
GS
5952 vec($foo, 2, 16) = 0x5065; # 'PerlPe'
5953 vec($foo, 3, 16) = 0x726C; # 'PerlPerl'
5954 vec($foo, 8, 8) = 0x50; # 'PerlPerlP'
5955 vec($foo, 9, 8) = 0x65; # 'PerlPerlPe'
5956 vec($foo, 20, 4) = 2; # 'PerlPerlPe' . "\x02"
f86cebdf
GS
5957 vec($foo, 21, 4) = 7; # 'PerlPerlPer'
5958 # 'r' is "\x72"
cca87523
GS
5959 vec($foo, 45, 2) = 3; # 'PerlPerlPer' . "\x0c"
5960 vec($foo, 93, 1) = 1; # 'PerlPerlPer' . "\x2c"
f86cebdf
GS
5961 vec($foo, 94, 1) = 1; # 'PerlPerlPerl'
5962 # 'l' is "\x6c"
cca87523 5963
19799a22 5964To transform a bit vector into a string or list of 0's and 1's, use these:
a0d0e21e
LW
5965
5966 $bits = unpack("b*", $vector);
5967 @bits = split(//, unpack("b*", $vector));
5968
7660c0ab 5969If you know the exact length in bits, it can be used in place of the C<*>.
a0d0e21e 5970
e69129f1
GS
5971Here is an example to illustrate how the bits actually fall in place:
5972
5973 #!/usr/bin/perl -wl
5974
5975 print <<'EOT';
b76cc8ba 5976 0 1 2 3
e69129f1
GS
5977 unpack("V",$_) 01234567890123456789012345678901
5978 ------------------------------------------------------------------
5979 EOT
5980
5981 for $w (0..3) {
5982 $width = 2**$w;
5983 for ($shift=0; $shift < $width; ++$shift) {
5984 for ($off=0; $off < 32/$width; ++$off) {
5985 $str = pack("B*", "0"x32);
5986 $bits = (1<<$shift);
5987 vec($str, $off, $width) = $bits;
5988 $res = unpack("b*",$str);
5989 $val = unpack("V", $str);
5990 write;
5991 }
5992 }
5993 }
5994
5995 format STDOUT =
5996 vec($_,@#,@#) = @<< == @######### @>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
5997 $off, $width, $bits, $val, $res
5998 .
5999 __END__
6000
6001Regardless of the machine architecture on which it is run, the above
6002example should print the following table:
6003
b76cc8ba 6004 0 1 2 3
e69129f1
GS
6005 unpack("V",$_) 01234567890123456789012345678901
6006 ------------------------------------------------------------------
6007 vec($_, 0, 1) = 1 == 1 10000000000000000000000000000000
6008 vec($_, 1, 1) = 1 == 2 01000000000000000000000000000000
6009 vec($_, 2, 1) = 1 == 4 00100000000000000000000000000000
6010 vec($_, 3, 1) = 1 == 8 00010000000000000000000000000000
6011 vec($_, 4, 1) = 1 == 16 00001000000000000000000000000000
6012 vec($_, 5, 1) = 1 == 32 00000100000000000000000000000000
6013 vec($_, 6, 1) = 1 == 64 00000010000000000000000000000000
6014 vec($_, 7, 1) = 1 == 128 00000001000000000000000000000000
6015 vec($_, 8, 1) = 1 == 256 00000000100000000000000000000000
6016 vec($_, 9, 1) = 1 == 512 00000000010000000000000000000000
6017 vec($_,10, 1) = 1 == 1024 00000000001000000000000000000000
6018 vec($_,11, 1) = 1 == 2048 00000000000100000000000000000000
6019 vec($_,12, 1) = 1 == 4096 00000000000010000000000000000000
6020 vec($_,13, 1) = 1 == 8192 00000000000001000000000000000000
6021 vec($_,14, 1) = 1 == 16384 00000000000000100000000000000000
6022 vec($_,15, 1) = 1 == 32768 00000000000000010000000000000000
6023 vec($_,16, 1) = 1 == 65536 00000000000000001000000000000000
6024 vec($_,17, 1) = 1 == 131072 00000000000000000100000000000000
6025 vec($_,18, 1) = 1 == 262144 00000000000000000010000000000000
6026 vec($_,19, 1) = 1 == 524288 00000000000000000001000000000000
6027 vec($_,20, 1) = 1 == 1048576 00000000000000000000100000000000
6028 vec($_,21, 1) = 1 == 2097152 00000000000000000000010000000000
6029 vec($_,22, 1) = 1 == 4194304 00000000000000000000001000000000
6030 vec($_,23, 1) = 1 == 8388608 00000000000000000000000100000000
6031 vec($_,24, 1) = 1 == 16777216 00000000000000000000000010000000
6032 vec($_,25, 1) = 1 == 33554432 00000000000000000000000001000000
6033 vec($_,26, 1) = 1 == 67108864 00000000000000000000000000100000
6034 vec($_,27, 1) = 1 == 134217728 00000000000000000000000000010000
6035 vec($_,28, 1) = 1 == 268435456 00000000000000000000000000001000
6036 vec($_,29, 1) = 1 == 536870912 00000000000000000000000000000100
6037 vec($_,30, 1) = 1 == 1073741824 00000000000000000000000000000010
6038 vec($_,31, 1) = 1 == 2147483648 00000000000000000000000000000001
6039 vec($_, 0, 2) = 1 == 1 10000000000000000000000000000000
6040 vec($_, 1, 2) = 1 == 4 00100000000000000000000000000000
6041 vec($_, 2, 2) = 1 == 16 00001000000000000000000000000000
6042 vec($_, 3, 2) = 1 == 64 00000010000000000000000000000000
6043 vec($_, 4, 2) = 1 == 256 00000000100000000000000000000000
6044 vec($_, 5, 2) = 1 == 1024 00000000001000000000000000000000
6045 vec($_, 6, 2) = 1 == 4096 00000000000010000000000000000000
6046 vec($_, 7, 2) = 1 == 16384 00000000000000100000000000000000
6047 vec($_, 8, 2) = 1 == 65536 00000000000000001000000000000000
6048 vec($_, 9, 2) = 1 == 262144 00000000000000000010000000000000
6049 vec($_,10, 2) = 1 == 1048576 00000000000000000000100000000000
6050 vec($_,11, 2) = 1 == 4194304 00000000000000000000001000000000
6051 vec($_,12, 2) = 1 == 16777216 00000000000000000000000010000000
6052 vec($_,13, 2) = 1 == 67108864 00000000000000000000000000100000
6053 vec($_,14, 2) = 1 == 268435456 00000000000000000000000000001000
6054 vec($_,15, 2) = 1 == 1073741824 00000000000000000000000000000010
6055 vec($_, 0, 2) = 2 == 2 01000000000000000000000000000000
6056 vec($_, 1, 2) = 2 == 8 00010000000000000000000000000000
6057 vec($_, 2, 2) = 2 == 32 00000100000000000000000000000000
6058 vec($_, 3, 2) = 2 == 128 00000001000000000000000000000000
6059 vec($_, 4, 2) = 2 == 512 00000000010000000000000000000000
6060 vec($_, 5, 2) = 2 == 2048 00000000000100000000000000000000
6061 vec($_, 6, 2) = 2 == 8192 00000000000001000000000000000000
6062 vec($_, 7, 2) = 2 == 32768 00000000000000010000000000000000
6063 vec($_, 8, 2) = 2 == 131072 00000000000000000100000000000000
6064 vec($_, 9, 2) = 2 == 524288 00000000000000000001000000000000
6065 vec($_,10, 2) = 2 == 2097152 00000000000000000000010000000000
6066 vec($_,11, 2) = 2 == 8388608 00000000000000000000000100000000
6067 vec($_,12, 2) = 2 == 33554432 00000000000000000000000001000000
6068 vec($_,13, 2) = 2 == 134217728 00000000000000000000000000010000
6069 vec($_,14, 2) = 2 == 536870912 00000000000000000000000000000100
6070 vec($_,15, 2) = 2 == 2147483648 00000000000000000000000000000001
6071 vec($_, 0, 4) = 1 == 1 10000000000000000000000000000000
6072 vec($_, 1, 4) = 1 == 16 00001000000000000000000000000000
6073 vec($_, 2, 4) = 1 == 256 00000000100000000000000000000000
6074 vec($_, 3, 4) = 1 == 4096 00000000000010000000000000000000
6075 vec($_, 4, 4) = 1 == 65536 00000000000000001000000000000000
6076 vec($_, 5, 4) = 1 == 1048576 00000000000000000000100000000000
6077 vec($_, 6, 4) = 1 == 16777216 00000000000000000000000010000000
6078 vec($_, 7, 4) = 1 == 268435456 00000000000000000000000000001000
6079 vec($_, 0, 4) = 2 == 2 01000000000000000000000000000000
6080 vec($_, 1, 4) = 2 == 32 00000100000000000000000000000000
6081 vec($_, 2, 4) = 2 == 512 00000000010000000000000000000000
6082 vec($_, 3, 4) = 2 == 8192 00000000000001000000000000000000
6083 vec($_, 4, 4) = 2 == 131072 00000000000000000100000000000000
6084 vec($_, 5, 4) = 2 == 2097152 00000000000000000000010000000000
6085 vec($_, 6, 4) = 2 == 33554432 00000000000000000000000001000000
6086 vec($_, 7, 4) = 2 == 536870912 00000000000000000000000000000100
6087 vec($_, 0, 4) = 4 == 4 00100000000000000000000000000000
6088 vec($_, 1, 4) = 4 == 64 00000010000000000000000000000000
6089 vec($_, 2, 4) = 4 == 1024 00000000001000000000000000000000
6090 vec($_, 3, 4) = 4 == 16384 00000000000000100000000000000000
6091 vec($_, 4, 4) = 4 == 262144 00000000000000000010000000000000
6092 vec($_, 5, 4) = 4 == 4194304 00000000000000000000001000000000
6093 vec($_, 6, 4) = 4 == 67108864 00000000000000000000000000100000
6094 vec($_, 7, 4) = 4 == 1073741824 00000000000000000000000000000010
6095 vec($_, 0, 4) = 8 == 8 00010000000000000000000000000000
6096 vec($_, 1, 4) = 8 == 128 00000001000000000000000000000000
6097 vec($_, 2, 4) = 8 == 2048 00000000000100000000000000000000
6098 vec($_, 3, 4) = 8 == 32768 00000000000000010000000000000000
6099 vec($_, 4, 4) = 8 == 524288 00000000000000000001000000000000
6100 vec($_, 5, 4) = 8 == 8388608 00000000000000000000000100000000
6101 vec($_, 6, 4) = 8 == 134217728 00000000000000000000000000010000
6102 vec($_, 7, 4) = 8 == 2147483648 00000000000000000000000000000001
6103 vec($_, 0, 8) = 1 == 1 10000000000000000000000000000000
6104 vec($_, 1, 8) = 1 == 256 00000000100000000000000000000000
6105 vec($_, 2, 8) = 1 == 65536 00000000000000001000000000000000
6106 vec($_, 3, 8) = 1 == 16777216 00000000000000000000000010000000
6107 vec($_, 0, 8) = 2 == 2 01000000000000000000000000000000
6108 vec($_, 1, 8) = 2 == 512 00000000010000000000000000000000
6109 vec($_, 2, 8) = 2 == 131072 00000000000000000100000000000000
6110 vec($_, 3, 8) = 2 == 33554432 00000000000000000000000001000000
6111 vec($_, 0, 8) = 4 == 4 00100000000000000000000000000000
6112 vec($_, 1, 8) = 4 == 1024 00000000001000000000000000000000
6113 vec($_, 2, 8) = 4 == 262144 00000000000000000010000000000000
6114 vec($_, 3, 8) = 4 == 67108864 00000000000000000000000000100000
6115 vec($_, 0, 8) = 8 == 8 00010000000000000000000000000000
6116 vec($_, 1, 8) = 8 == 2048 00000000000100000000000000000000
6117 vec($_, 2, 8) = 8 == 524288 00000000000000000001000000000000
6118 vec($_, 3, 8) = 8 == 134217728 00000000000000000000000000010000
6119 vec($_, 0, 8) = 16 == 16 00001000000000000000000000000000
6120 vec($_, 1, 8) = 16 == 4096 00000000000010000000000000000000
6121 vec($_, 2, 8) = 16 == 1048576 00000000000000000000100000000000
6122 vec($_, 3, 8) = 16 == 268435456 00000000000000000000000000001000
6123 vec($_, 0, 8) = 32 == 32 00000100000000000000000000000000
6124 vec($_, 1, 8) = 32 == 8192 00000000000001000000000000000000
6125 vec($_, 2, 8) = 32 == 2097152 00000000000000000000010000000000
6126 vec($_, 3, 8) = 32 == 536870912 00000000000000000000000000000100
6127 vec($_, 0, 8) = 64 == 64 00000010000000000000000000000000
6128 vec($_, 1, 8) = 64 == 16384 00000000000000100000000000000000
6129 vec($_, 2, 8) = 64 == 4194304 00000000000000000000001000000000
6130 vec($_, 3, 8) = 64 == 1073741824 00000000000000000000000000000010
6131 vec($_, 0, 8) = 128 == 128 00000001000000000000000000000000
6132 vec($_, 1, 8) = 128 == 32768 00000000000000010000000000000000
6133 vec($_, 2, 8) = 128 == 8388608 00000000000000000000000100000000
6134 vec($_, 3, 8) = 128 == 2147483648 00000000000000000000000000000001
6135
a0d0e21e
LW
6136=item wait
6137
2b5ab1e7
TC
6138Behaves like the wait(2) system call on your system: it waits for a child
6139process to terminate and returns the pid of the deceased process, or
19799a22 6140C<-1> if there are no child processes. The status is returned in C<$?>.
2b5ab1e7
TC
6141Note that a return value of C<-1> could mean that child processes are
6142being automatically reaped, as described in L<perlipc>.
a0d0e21e
LW
6143
6144=item waitpid PID,FLAGS
6145
2b5ab1e7
TC
6146Waits for a particular child process to terminate and returns the pid of
6147the deceased process, or C<-1> if there is no such child process. On some
6148systems, a value of 0 indicates that there are processes still running.
6149The status is returned in C<$?>. If you say
a0d0e21e 6150
5f05dabc 6151 use POSIX ":sys_wait_h";
5a964f20 6152 #...
b76cc8ba 6153 do {
2ac1ef3d 6154 $kid = waitpid(-1, WNOHANG);
2b5ab1e7 6155 } until $kid == -1;
a0d0e21e 6156
2b5ab1e7
TC
6157then you can do a non-blocking wait for all pending zombie processes.
6158Non-blocking wait is available on machines supporting either the
6159waitpid(2) or wait4(2) system calls. However, waiting for a particular
6160pid with FLAGS of C<0> is implemented everywhere. (Perl emulates the
6161system call by remembering the status values of processes that have
6162exited but have not been harvested by the Perl script yet.)
a0d0e21e 6163
2b5ab1e7
TC
6164Note that on some systems, a return value of C<-1> could mean that child
6165processes are being automatically reaped. See L<perlipc> for details,
6166and for other examples.
5a964f20 6167
a0d0e21e
LW
6168=item wantarray
6169
19799a22
GS
6170Returns true if the context of the currently executing subroutine is
6171looking for a list value. Returns false if the context is looking
54310121 6172for a scalar. Returns the undefined value if the context is looking
6173for no value (void context).
a0d0e21e 6174
54310121 6175 return unless defined wantarray; # don't bother doing more
6176 my @a = complex_calculation();
6177 return wantarray ? @a : "@a";
a0d0e21e 6178
19799a22
GS
6179This function should have been named wantlist() instead.
6180
a0d0e21e
LW
6181=item warn LIST
6182
19799a22 6183Produces a message on STDERR just like C<die>, but doesn't exit or throw
774d564b 6184an exception.
6185
7660c0ab
A
6186If LIST is empty and C<$@> already contains a value (typically from a
6187previous eval) that value is used after appending C<"\t...caught">
19799a22
GS
6188to C<$@>. This is useful for staying almost, but not entirely similar to
6189C<die>.
43051805 6190
7660c0ab 6191If C<$@> is empty then the string C<"Warning: Something's wrong"> is used.
43051805 6192
774d564b 6193No message is printed if there is a C<$SIG{__WARN__}> handler
6194installed. It is the handler's responsibility to deal with the message
19799a22 6195as it sees fit (like, for instance, converting it into a C<die>). Most
774d564b 6196handlers must therefore make arrangements to actually display the
19799a22 6197warnings that they are not prepared to deal with, by calling C<warn>
774d564b 6198again in the handler. Note that this is quite safe and will not
6199produce an endless loop, since C<__WARN__> hooks are not called from
6200inside one.
6201
6202You will find this behavior is slightly different from that of
6203C<$SIG{__DIE__}> handlers (which don't suppress the error text, but can
19799a22 6204instead call C<die> again to change it).
774d564b 6205
6206Using a C<__WARN__> handler provides a powerful way to silence all
6207warnings (even the so-called mandatory ones). An example:
6208
6209 # wipe out *all* compile-time warnings
6210 BEGIN { $SIG{'__WARN__'} = sub { warn $_[0] if $DOWARN } }
6211 my $foo = 10;
6212 my $foo = 20; # no warning about duplicate my $foo,
6213 # but hey, you asked for it!
6214 # no compile-time or run-time warnings before here
6215 $DOWARN = 1;
6216
6217 # run-time warnings enabled after here
6218 warn "\$foo is alive and $foo!"; # does show up
6219
6220See L<perlvar> for details on setting C<%SIG> entries, and for more
2b5ab1e7
TC
6221examples. See the Carp module for other kinds of warnings using its
6222carp() and cluck() functions.
a0d0e21e
LW
6223
6224=item write FILEHANDLE
6225
6226=item write EXPR
6227
6228=item write
6229
5a964f20 6230Writes a formatted record (possibly multi-line) to the specified FILEHANDLE,
a0d0e21e 6231using the format associated with that file. By default the format for
54310121 6232a file is the one having the same name as the filehandle, but the
19799a22 6233format for the current output channel (see the C<select> function) may be set
184e9718 6234explicitly by assigning the name of the format to the C<$~> variable.
a0d0e21e
LW
6235
6236Top of form processing is handled automatically: if there is
6237insufficient room on the current page for the formatted record, the
6238page is advanced by writing a form feed, a special top-of-page format
6239is used to format the new page header, and then the record is written.
6240By default the top-of-page format is the name of the filehandle with
6241"_TOP" appended, but it may be dynamically set to the format of your
184e9718 6242choice by assigning the name to the C<$^> variable while the filehandle is
a0d0e21e 6243selected. The number of lines remaining on the current page is in
7660c0ab 6244variable C<$->, which can be set to C<0> to force a new page.
a0d0e21e
LW
6245
6246If FILEHANDLE is unspecified, output goes to the current default output
6247channel, which starts out as STDOUT but may be changed by the
19799a22 6248C<select> operator. If the FILEHANDLE is an EXPR, then the expression
a0d0e21e
LW
6249is evaluated and the resulting string is used to look up the name of
6250the FILEHANDLE at run time. For more on formats, see L<perlform>.
6251
19799a22 6252Note that write is I<not> the opposite of C<read>. Unfortunately.
a0d0e21e
LW
6253
6254=item y///
6255
7660c0ab 6256The transliteration operator. Same as C<tr///>. See L<perlop>.
a0d0e21e
LW
6257
6258=back