4 perlfunc - Perl builtin functions
8 The functions in this section can serve as terms in an expression.
9 They fall into two major categories: list operators and named unary
10 operators. These differ in their precedence relationship with a
11 following comma. (See the precedence table in L<perlop>.) List
12 operators take more than one argument, while unary operators can never
13 take more than one argument. Thus, a comma terminates the argument of
14 a unary operator, but merely separates the arguments of a list
15 operator. A unary operator generally provides scalar context to its
16 argument, while a list operator may provide either scalar or list
17 contexts for its arguments. If it does both, scalar arguments
18 come first and list argument follow, and there can only ever
19 be one such list argument. For instance, splice() has three scalar
20 arguments followed by a list, whereas gethostbyname() has four scalar
23 In the syntax descriptions that follow, list operators that expect a
24 list (and provide list context for elements of the list) are shown
25 with LIST as an argument. Such a list may consist of any combination
26 of scalar arguments or list values; the list values will be included
27 in the list as if each individual element were interpolated at that
28 point in the list, forming a longer single-dimensional list value.
29 Commas should separate literal elements of the LIST.
31 Any function in the list below may be used either with or without
32 parentheses around its arguments. (The syntax descriptions omit the
33 parentheses.) If you use parentheses, the simple but occasionally
34 surprising rule is this: It I<looks> like a function, therefore it I<is> a
35 function, and precedence doesn't matter. Otherwise it's a list
36 operator or unary operator, and precedence does matter. Whitespace
37 between the function and left parenthesis doesn't count, so sometimes
38 you need to be careful:
40 print 1+2+4; # Prints 7.
41 print(1+2) + 4; # Prints 3.
42 print (1+2)+4; # Also prints 3!
43 print +(1+2)+4; # Prints 7.
44 print ((1+2)+4); # Prints 7.
46 If you run Perl with the B<-w> switch it can warn you about this. For
47 example, the third line above produces:
49 print (...) interpreted as function at - line 1.
50 Useless use of integer addition in void context at - line 1.
52 A few functions take no arguments at all, and therefore work as neither
53 unary nor list operators. These include such functions as C<time>
54 and C<endpwent>. For example, C<time+86_400> always means
57 For functions that can be used in either a scalar or list context,
58 nonabortive failure is generally indicated in scalar context by
59 returning the undefined value, and in list context by returning the
62 Remember the following important rule: There is B<no rule> that relates
63 the behavior of an expression in list context to its behavior in scalar
64 context, or vice versa. It might do two totally different things.
65 Each operator and function decides which sort of value would be most
66 appropriate to return in scalar context. Some operators return the
67 length of the list that would have been returned in list context. Some
68 operators return the first value in the list. Some operators return the
69 last value in the list. Some operators return a count of successful
70 operations. In general, they do what you want, unless you want
74 A named array in scalar context is quite different from what would at
75 first glance appear to be a list in scalar context. You can't get a list
76 like C<(1,2,3)> into being in scalar context, because the compiler knows
77 the context at compile time. It would generate the scalar comma operator
78 there, not the list construction version of the comma. That means it
79 was never a list to start with.
81 In general, functions in Perl that serve as wrappers for system calls ("syscalls")
82 of the same name (like chown(2), fork(2), closedir(2), etc.) return
83 true when they succeed and C<undef> otherwise, as is usually mentioned
84 in the descriptions below. This is different from the C interfaces,
85 which return C<-1> on failure. Exceptions to this rule include C<wait>,
86 C<waitpid>, and C<syscall>. System calls also set the special C<$!>
87 variable on failure. Other functions do not, except accidentally.
89 Extension modules can also hook into the Perl parser to define new
90 kinds of keyword-headed expression. These may look like functions, but
91 may also look completely different. The syntax following the keyword
92 is defined entirely by the extension. If you are an implementor, see
93 L<perlapi/PL_keyword_plugin> for the mechanism. If you are using such
94 a module, see the module's documentation for details of the syntax that
97 =head2 Perl Functions by Category
100 Here are Perl's functions (including things that look like
101 functions, like some keywords and named operators)
102 arranged by category. Some functions appear in more
107 =item Functions for SCALARs or strings
108 X<scalar> X<string> X<character>
110 =for Pod::Functions =String
112 C<chomp>, C<chop>, C<chr>, C<crypt>, C<fc>, C<hex>, C<index>, C<lc>,
113 C<lcfirst>, C<length>, C<oct>, C<ord>, C<pack>, C<q//>, C<qq//>, C<reverse>,
114 C<rindex>, C<sprintf>, C<substr>, C<tr///>, C<uc>, C<ucfirst>, C<y///>
116 C<fc> is available only if the C<"fc"> feature is enabled or if it is
117 prefixed with C<CORE::>. The C<"fc"> feature is enabled automatically
118 with a C<use v5.16> (or higher) declaration in the current scope.
121 =item Regular expressions and pattern matching
122 X<regular expression> X<regex> X<regexp>
124 =for Pod::Functions =Regexp
126 C<m//>, C<pos>, C<qr//>, C<quotemeta>, C<s///>, C<split>, C<study>
128 =item Numeric functions
129 X<numeric> X<number> X<trigonometric> X<trigonometry>
131 =for Pod::Functions =Math
133 C<abs>, C<atan2>, C<cos>, C<exp>, C<hex>, C<int>, C<log>, C<oct>, C<rand>,
134 C<sin>, C<sqrt>, C<srand>
136 =item Functions for real @ARRAYs
139 =for Pod::Functions =ARRAY
141 C<each>, C<keys>, C<pop>, C<push>, C<shift>, C<splice>, C<unshift>, C<values>
143 =item Functions for list data
146 =for Pod::Functions =LIST
148 C<grep>, C<join>, C<map>, C<qw//>, C<reverse>, C<sort>, C<unpack>
150 =item Functions for real %HASHes
153 =for Pod::Functions =HASH
155 C<delete>, C<each>, C<exists>, C<keys>, C<values>
157 =item Input and output functions
158 X<I/O> X<input> X<output> X<dbm>
160 =for Pod::Functions =I/O
162 C<binmode>, C<close>, C<closedir>, C<dbmclose>, C<dbmopen>, C<die>, C<eof>,
163 C<fileno>, C<flock>, C<format>, C<getc>, C<print>, C<printf>, C<read>,
164 C<readdir>, C<readline> C<rewinddir>, C<say>, C<seek>, C<seekdir>, C<select>,
165 C<syscall>, C<sysread>, C<sysseek>, C<syswrite>, C<tell>, C<telldir>,
166 C<truncate>, C<warn>, C<write>
168 C<say> is available only if the C<"say"> feature is enabled or if it is
169 prefixed with C<CORE::>. The C<"say"> feature is enabled automatically
170 with a C<use v5.10> (or higher) declaration in the current scope.
172 =item Functions for fixed-length data or records
174 =for Pod::Functions =Binary
176 C<pack>, C<read>, C<syscall>, C<sysread>, C<sysseek>, C<syswrite>, C<unpack>,
179 =item Functions for filehandles, files, or directories
180 X<file> X<filehandle> X<directory> X<pipe> X<link> X<symlink>
182 =for Pod::Functions =File
184 C<-I<X>>, C<chdir>, C<chmod>, C<chown>, C<chroot>, C<fcntl>, C<glob>,
185 C<ioctl>, C<link>, C<lstat>, C<mkdir>, C<open>, C<opendir>,
186 C<readlink>, C<rename>, C<rmdir>, C<stat>, C<symlink>, C<sysopen>,
187 C<umask>, C<unlink>, C<utime>
189 =item Keywords related to the control flow of your Perl program
192 =for Pod::Functions =Flow
194 C<break>, C<caller>, C<continue>, C<die>, C<do>,
195 C<dump>, C<eval>, C<evalbytes> C<exit>,
196 C<__FILE__>, C<goto>, C<last>, C<__LINE__>, C<next>, C<__PACKAGE__>,
197 C<redo>, C<return>, C<sub>, C<__SUB__>, C<wantarray>
199 C<break> is available only if you enable the experimental C<"switch">
200 feature or use the C<CORE::> prefix. The C<"switch"> feature also enables
201 the C<default>, C<given> and C<when> statements, which are documented in
202 L<perlsyn/"Switch Statements">. The C<"switch"> feature is enabled
203 automatically with a C<use v5.10> (or higher) declaration in the current
204 scope. In Perl v5.14 and earlier, C<continue> required the C<"switch">
205 feature, like the other keywords.
207 C<evalbytes> is only available with the C<"evalbytes"> feature (see
208 L<feature>) or if prefixed with C<CORE::>. C<__SUB__> is only available
209 with the C<"current_sub"> feature or if prefixed with C<CORE::>. Both
210 the C<"evalbytes"> and C<"current_sub"> features are enabled automatically
211 with a C<use v5.16> (or higher) declaration in the current scope.
213 =item Keywords related to scoping
215 =for Pod::Functions =Namespace
217 C<caller>, C<import>, C<local>, C<my>, C<our>, C<package>, C<state>, C<use>
219 C<state> is available only if the C<"state"> feature is enabled or if it is
220 prefixed with C<CORE::>. The C<"state"> feature is enabled automatically
221 with a C<use v5.10> (or higher) declaration in the current scope.
223 =item Miscellaneous functions
225 =for Pod::Functions =Misc
227 C<defined>, C<formline>, C<lock>, C<prototype>, C<reset>, C<scalar>, C<undef>
229 =item Functions for processes and process groups
230 X<process> X<pid> X<process id>
232 =for Pod::Functions =Process
234 C<alarm>, C<exec>, C<fork>, C<getpgrp>, C<getppid>, C<getpriority>, C<kill>,
235 C<pipe>, C<qx//>, C<readpipe>, C<setpgrp>,
236 C<setpriority>, C<sleep>, C<system>,
237 C<times>, C<wait>, C<waitpid>
239 =item Keywords related to Perl modules
242 =for Pod::Functions =Modules
244 C<do>, C<import>, C<no>, C<package>, C<require>, C<use>
246 =item Keywords related to classes and object-orientation
247 X<object> X<class> X<package>
249 =for Pod::Functions =Objects
251 C<bless>, C<dbmclose>, C<dbmopen>, C<package>, C<ref>, C<tie>, C<tied>,
254 =item Low-level socket functions
257 =for Pod::Functions =Socket
259 C<accept>, C<bind>, C<connect>, C<getpeername>, C<getsockname>,
260 C<getsockopt>, C<listen>, C<recv>, C<send>, C<setsockopt>, C<shutdown>,
261 C<socket>, C<socketpair>
263 =item System V interprocess communication functions
264 X<IPC> X<System V> X<semaphore> X<shared memory> X<memory> X<message>
266 =for Pod::Functions =SysV
268 C<msgctl>, C<msgget>, C<msgrcv>, C<msgsnd>, C<semctl>, C<semget>, C<semop>,
269 C<shmctl>, C<shmget>, C<shmread>, C<shmwrite>
271 =item Fetching user and group info
272 X<user> X<group> X<password> X<uid> X<gid> X<passwd> X</etc/passwd>
274 =for Pod::Functions =User
276 C<endgrent>, C<endhostent>, C<endnetent>, C<endpwent>, C<getgrent>,
277 C<getgrgid>, C<getgrnam>, C<getlogin>, C<getpwent>, C<getpwnam>,
278 C<getpwuid>, C<setgrent>, C<setpwent>
280 =item Fetching network info
281 X<network> X<protocol> X<host> X<hostname> X<IP> X<address> X<service>
283 =for Pod::Functions =Network
285 C<endprotoent>, C<endservent>, C<gethostbyaddr>, C<gethostbyname>,
286 C<gethostent>, C<getnetbyaddr>, C<getnetbyname>, C<getnetent>,
287 C<getprotobyname>, C<getprotobynumber>, C<getprotoent>,
288 C<getservbyname>, C<getservbyport>, C<getservent>, C<sethostent>,
289 C<setnetent>, C<setprotoent>, C<setservent>
291 =item Time-related functions
294 =for Pod::Functions =Time
296 C<gmtime>, C<localtime>, C<time>, C<times>
298 =item Non-function keywords
300 =for Pod::Functions =!Non-functions
302 C<and>, C<AUTOLOAD>, C<BEGIN>, C<CHECK>, C<cmp>, C<CORE>, C<__DATA__>,
303 C<default>, C<DESTROY>, C<else>, C<elseif>, C<elsif>, C<END>, C<__END__>,
304 C<eq>, C<for>, C<foreach>, C<ge>, C<given>, C<gt>, C<if>, C<INIT>, C<le>,
305 C<lt>, C<ne>, C<not>, C<or>, C<UNITCHECK>, C<unless>, C<until>, C<when>,
306 C<while>, C<x>, C<xor>
311 X<portability> X<Unix> X<portable>
313 Perl was born in Unix and can therefore access all common Unix
314 system calls. In non-Unix environments, the functionality of some
315 Unix system calls may not be available or details of the available
316 functionality may differ slightly. The Perl functions affected
319 C<-X>, C<binmode>, C<chmod>, C<chown>, C<chroot>, C<crypt>,
320 C<dbmclose>, C<dbmopen>, C<dump>, C<endgrent>, C<endhostent>,
321 C<endnetent>, C<endprotoent>, C<endpwent>, C<endservent>, C<exec>,
322 C<fcntl>, C<flock>, C<fork>, C<getgrent>, C<getgrgid>, C<gethostbyname>,
323 C<gethostent>, C<getlogin>, C<getnetbyaddr>, C<getnetbyname>, C<getnetent>,
324 C<getppid>, C<getpgrp>, C<getpriority>, C<getprotobynumber>,
325 C<getprotoent>, C<getpwent>, C<getpwnam>, C<getpwuid>,
326 C<getservbyport>, C<getservent>, C<getsockopt>, C<glob>, C<ioctl>,
327 C<kill>, C<link>, C<lstat>, C<msgctl>, C<msgget>, C<msgrcv>,
328 C<msgsnd>, C<open>, C<pipe>, C<readlink>, C<rename>, C<select>, C<semctl>,
329 C<semget>, C<semop>, C<setgrent>, C<sethostent>, C<setnetent>,
330 C<setpgrp>, C<setpriority>, C<setprotoent>, C<setpwent>,
331 C<setservent>, C<setsockopt>, C<shmctl>, C<shmget>, C<shmread>,
332 C<shmwrite>, C<socket>, C<socketpair>,
333 C<stat>, C<symlink>, C<syscall>, C<sysopen>, C<system>,
334 C<times>, C<truncate>, C<umask>, C<unlink>,
335 C<utime>, C<wait>, C<waitpid>
337 For more information about the portability of these functions, see
338 L<perlport> and other available platform-specific documentation.
340 =head2 Alphabetical Listing of Perl Functions
345 X<-r>X<-w>X<-x>X<-o>X<-R>X<-W>X<-X>X<-O>X<-e>X<-z>X<-s>X<-f>X<-d>X<-l>X<-p>
346 X<-S>X<-b>X<-c>X<-t>X<-u>X<-g>X<-k>X<-T>X<-B>X<-M>X<-A>X<-C>
354 =for Pod::Functions a file test (-r, -x, etc)
356 A file test, where X is one of the letters listed below. This unary
357 operator takes one argument, either a filename, a filehandle, or a dirhandle,
358 and tests the associated file to see if something is true about it. If the
359 argument is omitted, tests C<$_>, except for C<-t>, which tests STDIN.
360 Unless otherwise documented, it returns C<1> for true and C<''> for false, or
361 the undefined value if the file doesn't exist. Despite the funny
362 names, precedence is the same as any other named unary operator. The
363 operator may be any of:
365 -r File is readable by effective uid/gid.
366 -w File is writable by effective uid/gid.
367 -x File is executable by effective uid/gid.
368 -o File is owned by effective uid.
370 -R File is readable by real uid/gid.
371 -W File is writable by real uid/gid.
372 -X File is executable by real uid/gid.
373 -O File is owned by real uid.
376 -z File has zero size (is empty).
377 -s File has nonzero size (returns size in bytes).
379 -f File is a plain file.
380 -d File is a directory.
381 -l File is a symbolic link.
382 -p File is a named pipe (FIFO), or Filehandle is a pipe.
384 -b File is a block special file.
385 -c File is a character special file.
386 -t Filehandle is opened to a tty.
388 -u File has setuid bit set.
389 -g File has setgid bit set.
390 -k File has sticky bit set.
392 -T File is an ASCII text file (heuristic guess).
393 -B File is a "binary" file (opposite of -T).
395 -M Script start time minus file modification time, in days.
396 -A Same for access time.
397 -C Same for inode change time (Unix, may differ for other
404 next unless -f $_; # ignore specials
408 Note that C<-s/a/b/> does not do a negated substitution. Saying
409 C<-exp($foo)> still works as expected, however: only single letters
410 following a minus are interpreted as file tests.
412 These operators are exempt from the "looks like a function rule" described
413 above. That is, an opening parenthesis after the operator does not affect
414 how much of the following code constitutes the argument. Put the opening
415 parentheses before the operator to separate it from code that follows (this
416 applies only to operators with higher precedence than unary operators, of
419 -s($file) + 1024 # probably wrong; same as -s($file + 1024)
420 (-s $file) + 1024 # correct
422 The interpretation of the file permission operators C<-r>, C<-R>,
423 C<-w>, C<-W>, C<-x>, and C<-X> is by default based solely on the mode
424 of the file and the uids and gids of the user. There may be other
425 reasons you can't actually read, write, or execute the file: for
426 example network filesystem access controls, ACLs (access control lists),
427 read-only filesystems, and unrecognized executable formats. Note
428 that the use of these six specific operators to verify if some operation
429 is possible is usually a mistake, because it may be open to race
432 Also note that, for the superuser on the local filesystems, the C<-r>,
433 C<-R>, C<-w>, and C<-W> tests always return 1, and C<-x> and C<-X> return 1
434 if any execute bit is set in the mode. Scripts run by the superuser
435 may thus need to do a stat() to determine the actual mode of the file,
436 or temporarily set their effective uid to something else.
438 If you are using ACLs, there is a pragma called C<filetest> that may
439 produce more accurate results than the bare stat() mode bits.
440 When under C<use filetest 'access'> the above-mentioned filetests
441 test whether the permission can(not) be granted using the
442 access(2) family of system calls. Also note that the C<-x> and C<-X> may
443 under this pragma return true even if there are no execute permission
444 bits set (nor any extra execute permission ACLs). This strangeness is
445 due to the underlying system calls' definitions. Note also that, due to
446 the implementation of C<use filetest 'access'>, the C<_> special
447 filehandle won't cache the results of the file tests when this pragma is
448 in effect. Read the documentation for the C<filetest> pragma for more
451 The C<-T> and C<-B> switches work as follows. The first block or so of the
452 file is examined for odd characters such as strange control codes or
453 characters with the high bit set. If too many strange characters (>30%)
454 are found, it's a C<-B> file; otherwise it's a C<-T> file. Also, any file
455 containing a zero byte in the first block is considered a binary file. If C<-T>
456 or C<-B> is used on a filehandle, the current IO buffer is examined
457 rather than the first block. Both C<-T> and C<-B> return true on an empty
458 file, or a file at EOF when testing a filehandle. Because you have to
459 read a file to do the C<-T> test, on most occasions you want to use a C<-f>
460 against the file first, as in C<next unless -f $file && -T $file>.
462 If any of the file tests (or either the C<stat> or C<lstat> operator) is given
463 the special filehandle consisting of a solitary underline, then the stat
464 structure of the previous file test (or stat operator) is used, saving
465 a system call. (This doesn't work with C<-t>, and you need to remember
466 that lstat() and C<-l> leave values in the stat structure for the
467 symbolic link, not the real file.) (Also, if the stat buffer was filled by
468 an C<lstat> call, C<-T> and C<-B> will reset it with the results of C<stat _>).
471 print "Can do.\n" if -r $a || -w _ || -x _;
474 print "Readable\n" if -r _;
475 print "Writable\n" if -w _;
476 print "Executable\n" if -x _;
477 print "Setuid\n" if -u _;
478 print "Setgid\n" if -g _;
479 print "Sticky\n" if -k _;
480 print "Text\n" if -T _;
481 print "Binary\n" if -B _;
483 As of Perl 5.10.0, as a form of purely syntactic sugar, you can stack file
484 test operators, in a way that C<-f -w -x $file> is equivalent to
485 C<-x $file && -w _ && -f _>. (This is only fancy fancy: if you use
486 the return value of C<-f $file> as an argument to another filetest
487 operator, no special magic will happen.)
489 Portability issues: L<perlport/-X>.
491 To avoid confusing would-be users of your code with mysterious
492 syntax errors, put something like this at the top of your script:
494 use 5.010; # so filetest ops can stack
501 =for Pod::Functions absolute value function
503 Returns the absolute value of its argument.
504 If VALUE is omitted, uses C<$_>.
506 =item accept NEWSOCKET,GENERICSOCKET
509 =for Pod::Functions accept an incoming socket connect
511 Accepts an incoming socket connect, just as accept(2)
512 does. Returns the packed address if it succeeded, false otherwise.
513 See the example in L<perlipc/"Sockets: Client/Server Communication">.
515 On systems that support a close-on-exec flag on files, the flag will
516 be set for the newly opened file descriptor, as determined by the
517 value of $^F. See L<perlvar/$^F>.
526 =for Pod::Functions schedule a SIGALRM
528 Arranges to have a SIGALRM delivered to this process after the
529 specified number of wallclock seconds has elapsed. If SECONDS is not
530 specified, the value stored in C<$_> is used. (On some machines,
531 unfortunately, the elapsed time may be up to one second less or more
532 than you specified because of how seconds are counted, and process
533 scheduling may delay the delivery of the signal even further.)
535 Only one timer may be counting at once. Each call disables the
536 previous timer, and an argument of C<0> may be supplied to cancel the
537 previous timer without starting a new one. The returned value is the
538 amount of time remaining on the previous timer.
540 For delays of finer granularity than one second, the Time::HiRes module
541 (from CPAN, and starting from Perl 5.8 part of the standard
542 distribution) provides ualarm(). You may also use Perl's four-argument
543 version of select() leaving the first three arguments undefined, or you
544 might be able to use the C<syscall> interface to access setitimer(2) if
545 your system supports it. See L<perlfaq8> for details.
547 It is usually a mistake to intermix C<alarm> and C<sleep> calls, because
548 C<sleep> may be internally implemented on your system with C<alarm>.
550 If you want to use C<alarm> to time out a system call you need to use an
551 C<eval>/C<die> pair. You can't rely on the alarm causing the system call to
552 fail with C<$!> set to C<EINTR> because Perl sets up signal handlers to
553 restart system calls on some systems. Using C<eval>/C<die> always works,
554 modulo the caveats given in L<perlipc/"Signals">.
557 local $SIG{ALRM} = sub { die "alarm\n" }; # NB: \n required
559 $nread = sysread SOCKET, $buffer, $size;
563 die unless $@ eq "alarm\n"; # propagate unexpected errors
570 For more information see L<perlipc>.
572 Portability issues: L<perlport/alarm>.
575 X<atan2> X<arctangent> X<tan> X<tangent>
577 =for Pod::Functions arctangent of Y/X in the range -PI to PI
579 Returns the arctangent of Y/X in the range -PI to PI.
581 For the tangent operation, you may use the C<Math::Trig::tan>
582 function, or use the familiar relation:
584 sub tan { sin($_[0]) / cos($_[0]) }
586 The return value for C<atan2(0,0)> is implementation-defined; consult
587 your atan2(3) manpage for more information.
589 Portability issues: L<perlport/atan2>.
591 =item bind SOCKET,NAME
594 =for Pod::Functions binds an address to a socket
596 Binds a network address to a socket, just as bind(2)
597 does. Returns true if it succeeded, false otherwise. NAME should be a
598 packed address of the appropriate type for the socket. See the examples in
599 L<perlipc/"Sockets: Client/Server Communication">.
601 =item binmode FILEHANDLE, LAYER
602 X<binmode> X<binary> X<text> X<DOS> X<Windows>
604 =item binmode FILEHANDLE
606 =for Pod::Functions prepare binary files for I/O
608 Arranges for FILEHANDLE to be read or written in "binary" or "text"
609 mode on systems where the run-time libraries distinguish between
610 binary and text files. If FILEHANDLE is an expression, the value is
611 taken as the name of the filehandle. Returns true on success,
612 otherwise it returns C<undef> and sets C<$!> (errno).
614 On some systems (in general, DOS- and Windows-based systems) binmode()
615 is necessary when you're not working with a text file. For the sake
616 of portability it is a good idea always to use it when appropriate,
617 and never to use it when it isn't appropriate. Also, people can
618 set their I/O to be by default UTF8-encoded Unicode, not bytes.
620 In other words: regardless of platform, use binmode() on binary data,
621 like images, for example.
623 If LAYER is present it is a single string, but may contain multiple
624 directives. The directives alter the behaviour of the filehandle.
625 When LAYER is present, using binmode on a text file makes sense.
627 If LAYER is omitted or specified as C<:raw> the filehandle is made
628 suitable for passing binary data. This includes turning off possible CRLF
629 translation and marking it as bytes (as opposed to Unicode characters).
630 Note that, despite what may be implied in I<"Programming Perl"> (the
631 Camel, 3rd edition) or elsewhere, C<:raw> is I<not> simply the inverse of C<:crlf>.
632 Other layers that would affect the binary nature of the stream are
633 I<also> disabled. See L<PerlIO>, L<perlrun>, and the discussion about the
634 PERLIO environment variable.
636 The C<:bytes>, C<:crlf>, C<:utf8>, and any other directives of the
637 form C<:...>, are called I/O I<layers>. The C<open> pragma can be used to
638 establish default I/O layers. See L<open>.
640 I<The LAYER parameter of the binmode() function is described as "DISCIPLINE"
641 in "Programming Perl, 3rd Edition". However, since the publishing of this
642 book, by many known as "Camel III", the consensus of the naming of this
643 functionality has moved from "discipline" to "layer". All documentation
644 of this version of Perl therefore refers to "layers" rather than to
645 "disciplines". Now back to the regularly scheduled documentation...>
647 To mark FILEHANDLE as UTF-8, use C<:utf8> or C<:encoding(UTF-8)>.
648 C<:utf8> just marks the data as UTF-8 without further checking,
649 while C<:encoding(UTF-8)> checks the data for actually being valid
650 UTF-8. More details can be found in L<PerlIO::encoding>.
652 In general, binmode() should be called after open() but before any I/O
653 is done on the filehandle. Calling binmode() normally flushes any
654 pending buffered output data (and perhaps pending input data) on the
655 handle. An exception to this is the C<:encoding> layer that
656 changes the default character encoding of the handle; see L</open>.
657 The C<:encoding> layer sometimes needs to be called in
658 mid-stream, and it doesn't flush the stream. The C<:encoding>
659 also implicitly pushes on top of itself the C<:utf8> layer because
660 internally Perl operates on UTF8-encoded Unicode characters.
662 The operating system, device drivers, C libraries, and Perl run-time
663 system all conspire to let the programmer treat a single
664 character (C<\n>) as the line terminator, irrespective of external
665 representation. On many operating systems, the native text file
666 representation matches the internal representation, but on some
667 platforms the external representation of C<\n> is made up of more than
670 All variants of Unix, Mac OS (old and new), and Stream_LF files on VMS use
671 a single character to end each line in the external representation of text
672 (even though that single character is CARRIAGE RETURN on old, pre-Darwin
673 flavors of Mac OS, and is LINE FEED on Unix and most VMS files). In other
674 systems like OS/2, DOS, and the various flavors of MS-Windows, your program
675 sees a C<\n> as a simple C<\cJ>, but what's stored in text files are the
676 two characters C<\cM\cJ>. That means that if you don't use binmode() on
677 these systems, C<\cM\cJ> sequences on disk will be converted to C<\n> on
678 input, and any C<\n> in your program will be converted back to C<\cM\cJ> on
679 output. This is what you want for text files, but it can be disastrous for
682 Another consequence of using binmode() (on some systems) is that
683 special end-of-file markers will be seen as part of the data stream.
684 For systems from the Microsoft family this means that, if your binary
685 data contain C<\cZ>, the I/O subsystem will regard it as the end of
686 the file, unless you use binmode().
688 binmode() is important not only for readline() and print() operations,
689 but also when using read(), seek(), sysread(), syswrite() and tell()
690 (see L<perlport> for more details). See the C<$/> and C<$\> variables
691 in L<perlvar> for how to manually set your input and output
692 line-termination sequences.
694 Portability issues: L<perlport/binmode>.
696 =item bless REF,CLASSNAME
701 =for Pod::Functions create an object
703 This function tells the thingy referenced by REF that it is now an object
704 in the CLASSNAME package. If CLASSNAME is omitted, the current package
705 is used. Because a C<bless> is often the last thing in a constructor,
706 it returns the reference for convenience. Always use the two-argument
707 version if a derived class might inherit the function doing the blessing.
708 See L<perlobj> for more about the blessing (and blessings) of objects.
710 Consider always blessing objects in CLASSNAMEs that are mixed case.
711 Namespaces with all lowercase names are considered reserved for
712 Perl pragmata. Builtin types have all uppercase names. To prevent
713 confusion, you may wish to avoid such package names as well. Make sure
714 that CLASSNAME is a true value.
716 See L<perlmod/"Perl Modules">.
720 =for Pod::Functions +switch break out of a C<given> block
722 Break out of a C<given()> block.
724 This keyword is enabled by the C<"switch"> feature; see L<feature> for
725 more information on C<"switch">. You can also access it by prefixing it
726 with C<CORE::>. Alternatively, include a C<use v5.10> or later to the
730 X<caller> X<call stack> X<stack> X<stack trace>
734 =for Pod::Functions get context of the current subroutine call
736 Returns the context of the current subroutine call. In scalar context,
737 returns the caller's package name if there I<is> a caller (that is, if
738 we're in a subroutine or C<eval> or C<require>) and the undefined value
739 otherwise. In list context, returns
742 ($package, $filename, $line) = caller;
744 With EXPR, it returns some extra information that the debugger uses to
745 print a stack trace. The value of EXPR indicates how many call frames
746 to go back before the current one.
749 ($package, $filename, $line, $subroutine, $hasargs,
752 $wantarray, $evaltext, $is_require, $hints, $bitmask, $hinthash)
755 Here $subroutine may be C<(eval)> if the frame is not a subroutine
756 call, but an C<eval>. In such a case additional elements $evaltext and
757 C<$is_require> are set: C<$is_require> is true if the frame is created by a
758 C<require> or C<use> statement, $evaltext contains the text of the
759 C<eval EXPR> statement. In particular, for an C<eval BLOCK> statement,
760 $subroutine is C<(eval)>, but $evaltext is undefined. (Note also that
761 each C<use> statement creates a C<require> frame inside an C<eval EXPR>
762 frame.) $subroutine may also be C<(unknown)> if this particular
763 subroutine happens to have been deleted from the symbol table.
764 C<$hasargs> is true if a new instance of C<@_> was set up for the frame.
765 C<$hints> and C<$bitmask> contain pragmatic hints that the caller was
766 compiled with. C<$hints> corresponds to C<$^H>, and C<$bitmask>
767 corresponds to C<${^WARNING_BITS}>. The
768 C<$hints> and C<$bitmask> values are subject
769 to change between versions of Perl, and are not meant for external use.
771 C<$hinthash> is a reference to a hash containing the value of C<%^H> when the
772 caller was compiled, or C<undef> if C<%^H> was empty. Do not modify the values
773 of this hash, as they are the actual values stored in the optree.
775 Furthermore, when called from within the DB package in
776 list context, and with an argument, caller returns more
777 detailed information: it sets the list variable C<@DB::args> to be the
778 arguments with which the subroutine was invoked.
780 Be aware that the optimizer might have optimized call frames away before
781 C<caller> had a chance to get the information. That means that C<caller(N)>
782 might not return information about the call frame you expect it to, for
783 C<< N > 1 >>. In particular, C<@DB::args> might have information from the
784 previous time C<caller> was called.
786 Be aware that setting C<@DB::args> is I<best effort>, intended for
787 debugging or generating backtraces, and should not be relied upon. In
788 particular, as C<@_> contains aliases to the caller's arguments, Perl does
789 not take a copy of C<@_>, so C<@DB::args> will contain modifications the
790 subroutine makes to C<@_> or its contents, not the original values at call
791 time. C<@DB::args>, like C<@_>, does not hold explicit references to its
792 elements, so under certain cases its elements may have become freed and
793 reallocated for other variables or temporary values. Finally, a side effect
794 of the current implementation is that the effects of C<shift @_> can
795 I<normally> be undone (but not C<pop @_> or other splicing, I<and> not if a
796 reference to C<@_> has been taken, I<and> subject to the caveat about reallocated
797 elements), so C<@DB::args> is actually a hybrid of the current state and
798 initial state of C<@_>. Buyer beware.
805 =item chdir FILEHANDLE
807 =item chdir DIRHANDLE
811 =for Pod::Functions change your current working directory
813 Changes the working directory to EXPR, if possible. If EXPR is omitted,
814 changes to the directory specified by C<$ENV{HOME}>, if set; if not,
815 changes to the directory specified by C<$ENV{LOGDIR}>. (Under VMS, the
816 variable C<$ENV{SYS$LOGIN}> is also checked, and used if it is set.) If
817 neither is set, C<chdir> does nothing. It returns true on success,
818 false otherwise. See the example under C<die>.
820 On systems that support fchdir(2), you may pass a filehandle or
821 directory handle as the argument. On systems that don't support fchdir(2),
822 passing handles raises an exception.
825 X<chmod> X<permission> X<mode>
827 =for Pod::Functions changes the permissions on a list of files
829 Changes the permissions of a list of files. The first element of the
830 list must be the numeric mode, which should probably be an octal
831 number, and which definitely should I<not> be a string of octal digits:
832 C<0644> is okay, but C<"0644"> is not. Returns the number of files
833 successfully changed. See also L</oct> if all you have is a string.
835 $cnt = chmod 0755, "foo", "bar";
836 chmod 0755, @executables;
837 $mode = "0644"; chmod $mode, "foo"; # !!! sets mode to
839 $mode = "0644"; chmod oct($mode), "foo"; # this is better
840 $mode = 0644; chmod $mode, "foo"; # this is best
842 On systems that support fchmod(2), you may pass filehandles among the
843 files. On systems that don't support fchmod(2), passing filehandles raises
844 an exception. Filehandles must be passed as globs or glob references to be
845 recognized; barewords are considered filenames.
847 open(my $fh, "<", "foo");
848 my $perm = (stat $fh)[2] & 07777;
849 chmod($perm | 0600, $fh);
851 You can also import the symbolic C<S_I*> constants from the C<Fcntl>
854 use Fcntl qw( :mode );
855 chmod S_IRWXU|S_IRGRP|S_IXGRP|S_IROTH|S_IXOTH, @executables;
856 # Identical to the chmod 0755 of the example above.
858 Portability issues: L<perlport/chmod>.
861 X<chomp> X<INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR> X<$/> X<newline> X<eol>
867 =for Pod::Functions remove a trailing record separator from a string
869 This safer version of L</chop> removes any trailing string
870 that corresponds to the current value of C<$/> (also known as
871 $INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR in the C<English> module). It returns the total
872 number of characters removed from all its arguments. It's often used to
873 remove the newline from the end of an input record when you're worried
874 that the final record may be missing its newline. When in paragraph
875 mode (C<$/ = "">), it removes all trailing newlines from the string.
876 When in slurp mode (C<$/ = undef>) or fixed-length record mode (C<$/> is
877 a reference to an integer or the like; see L<perlvar>) chomp() won't
879 If VARIABLE is omitted, it chomps C<$_>. Example:
882 chomp; # avoid \n on last field
887 If VARIABLE is a hash, it chomps the hash's values, but not its keys.
889 You can actually chomp anything that's an lvalue, including an assignment:
892 chomp($answer = <STDIN>);
894 If you chomp a list, each element is chomped, and the total number of
895 characters removed is returned.
897 Note that parentheses are necessary when you're chomping anything
898 that is not a simple variable. This is because C<chomp $cwd = `pwd`;>
899 is interpreted as C<(chomp $cwd) = `pwd`;>, rather than as
900 C<chomp( $cwd = `pwd` )> which you might expect. Similarly,
901 C<chomp $a, $b> is interpreted as C<chomp($a), $b> rather than
911 =for Pod::Functions remove the last character from a string
913 Chops off the last character of a string and returns the character
914 chopped. It is much more efficient than C<s/.$//s> because it neither
915 scans nor copies the string. If VARIABLE is omitted, chops C<$_>.
916 If VARIABLE is a hash, it chops the hash's values, but not its keys.
918 You can actually chop anything that's an lvalue, including an assignment.
920 If you chop a list, each element is chopped. Only the value of the
921 last C<chop> is returned.
923 Note that C<chop> returns the last character. To return all but the last
924 character, use C<substr($string, 0, -1)>.
929 X<chown> X<owner> X<user> X<group>
931 =for Pod::Functions change the ownership on a list of files
933 Changes the owner (and group) of a list of files. The first two
934 elements of the list must be the I<numeric> uid and gid, in that
935 order. A value of -1 in either position is interpreted by most
936 systems to leave that value unchanged. Returns the number of files
937 successfully changed.
939 $cnt = chown $uid, $gid, 'foo', 'bar';
940 chown $uid, $gid, @filenames;
942 On systems that support fchown(2), you may pass filehandles among the
943 files. On systems that don't support fchown(2), passing filehandles raises
944 an exception. Filehandles must be passed as globs or glob references to be
945 recognized; barewords are considered filenames.
947 Here's an example that looks up nonnumeric uids in the passwd file:
950 chomp($user = <STDIN>);
952 chomp($pattern = <STDIN>);
954 ($login,$pass,$uid,$gid) = getpwnam($user)
955 or die "$user not in passwd file";
957 @ary = glob($pattern); # expand filenames
958 chown $uid, $gid, @ary;
960 On most systems, you are not allowed to change the ownership of the
961 file unless you're the superuser, although you should be able to change
962 the group to any of your secondary groups. On insecure systems, these
963 restrictions may be relaxed, but this is not a portable assumption.
964 On POSIX systems, you can detect this condition this way:
966 use POSIX qw(sysconf _PC_CHOWN_RESTRICTED);
967 $can_chown_giveaway = not sysconf(_PC_CHOWN_RESTRICTED);
969 Portability issues: L<perlport/chmod>.
972 X<chr> X<character> X<ASCII> X<Unicode>
976 =for Pod::Functions get character this number represents
978 Returns the character represented by that NUMBER in the character set.
979 For example, C<chr(65)> is C<"A"> in either ASCII or Unicode, and
980 chr(0x263a) is a Unicode smiley face.
982 Negative values give the Unicode replacement character (chr(0xfffd)),
983 except under the L<bytes> pragma, where the low eight bits of the value
984 (truncated to an integer) are used.
986 If NUMBER is omitted, uses C<$_>.
988 For the reverse, use L</ord>.
990 Note that characters from 128 to 255 (inclusive) are by default
991 internally not encoded as UTF-8 for backward compatibility reasons.
993 See L<perlunicode> for more about Unicode.
995 =item chroot FILENAME
1000 =for Pod::Functions make directory new root for path lookups
1002 This function works like the system call by the same name: it makes the
1003 named directory the new root directory for all further pathnames that
1004 begin with a C</> by your process and all its children. (It doesn't
1005 change your current working directory, which is unaffected.) For security
1006 reasons, this call is restricted to the superuser. If FILENAME is
1007 omitted, does a C<chroot> to C<$_>.
1009 Portability issues: L<perlport/chroot>.
1011 =item close FILEHANDLE
1016 =for Pod::Functions close file (or pipe or socket) handle
1018 Closes the file or pipe associated with the filehandle, flushes the IO
1019 buffers, and closes the system file descriptor. Returns true if those
1020 operations succeed and if no error was reported by any PerlIO
1021 layer. Closes the currently selected filehandle if the argument is
1024 You don't have to close FILEHANDLE if you are immediately going to do
1025 another C<open> on it, because C<open> closes it for you. (See
1026 L<open|/open FILEHANDLE>.) However, an explicit C<close> on an input file resets the line
1027 counter (C<$.>), while the implicit close done by C<open> does not.
1029 If the filehandle came from a piped open, C<close> returns false if one of
1030 the other syscalls involved fails or if its program exits with non-zero
1031 status. If the only problem was that the program exited non-zero, C<$!>
1032 will be set to C<0>. Closing a pipe also waits for the process executing
1033 on the pipe to exit--in case you wish to look at the output of the pipe
1034 afterwards--and implicitly puts the exit status value of that command into
1035 C<$?> and C<${^CHILD_ERROR_NATIVE}>.
1037 If there are multiple threads running, C<close> on a filehandle from a
1038 piped open returns true without waiting for the child process to terminate,
1039 if the filehandle is still open in another thread.
1041 Closing the read end of a pipe before the process writing to it at the
1042 other end is done writing results in the writer receiving a SIGPIPE. If
1043 the other end can't handle that, be sure to read all the data before
1048 open(OUTPUT, '|sort >foo') # pipe to sort
1049 or die "Can't start sort: $!";
1050 #... # print stuff to output
1051 close OUTPUT # wait for sort to finish
1052 or warn $! ? "Error closing sort pipe: $!"
1053 : "Exit status $? from sort";
1054 open(INPUT, 'foo') # get sort's results
1055 or die "Can't open 'foo' for input: $!";
1057 FILEHANDLE may be an expression whose value can be used as an indirect
1058 filehandle, usually the real filehandle name or an autovivified handle.
1060 =item closedir DIRHANDLE
1063 =for Pod::Functions close directory handle
1065 Closes a directory opened by C<opendir> and returns the success of that
1068 =item connect SOCKET,NAME
1071 =for Pod::Functions connect to a remote socket
1073 Attempts to connect to a remote socket, just like connect(2).
1074 Returns true if it succeeded, false otherwise. NAME should be a
1075 packed address of the appropriate type for the socket. See the examples in
1076 L<perlipc/"Sockets: Client/Server Communication">.
1078 =item continue BLOCK
1083 =for Pod::Functions optional trailing block in a while or foreach
1085 When followed by a BLOCK, C<continue> is actually a
1086 flow control statement rather than a function. If
1087 there is a C<continue> BLOCK attached to a BLOCK (typically in a C<while> or
1088 C<foreach>), it is always executed just before the conditional is about to
1089 be evaluated again, just like the third part of a C<for> loop in C. Thus
1090 it can be used to increment a loop variable, even when the loop has been
1091 continued via the C<next> statement (which is similar to the C C<continue>
1094 C<last>, C<next>, or C<redo> may appear within a C<continue>
1095 block; C<last> and C<redo> behave as if they had been executed within
1096 the main block. So will C<next>, but since it will execute a C<continue>
1097 block, it may be more entertaining.
1100 ### redo always comes here
1103 ### next always comes here
1105 # then back the top to re-check EXPR
1107 ### last always comes here
1109 Omitting the C<continue> section is equivalent to using an
1110 empty one, logically enough, so C<next> goes directly back
1111 to check the condition at the top of the loop.
1113 When there is no BLOCK, C<continue> is a function that
1114 falls through the current C<when> or C<default> block instead of iterating
1115 a dynamically enclosing C<foreach> or exiting a lexically enclosing C<given>.
1116 In Perl 5.14 and earlier, this form of C<continue> was
1117 only available when the C<"switch"> feature was enabled.
1118 See L<feature> and L<perlsyn/"Switch Statements"> for more
1122 X<cos> X<cosine> X<acos> X<arccosine>
1126 =for Pod::Functions cosine function
1128 Returns the cosine of EXPR (expressed in radians). If EXPR is omitted,
1129 takes the cosine of C<$_>.
1131 For the inverse cosine operation, you may use the C<Math::Trig::acos()>
1132 function, or use this relation:
1134 sub acos { atan2( sqrt(1 - $_[0] * $_[0]), $_[0] ) }
1136 =item crypt PLAINTEXT,SALT
1137 X<crypt> X<digest> X<hash> X<salt> X<plaintext> X<password>
1138 X<decrypt> X<cryptography> X<passwd> X<encrypt>
1140 =for Pod::Functions one-way passwd-style encryption
1142 Creates a digest string exactly like the crypt(3) function in the C
1143 library (assuming that you actually have a version there that has not
1144 been extirpated as a potential munition).
1146 crypt() is a one-way hash function. The PLAINTEXT and SALT are turned
1147 into a short string, called a digest, which is returned. The same
1148 PLAINTEXT and SALT will always return the same string, but there is no
1149 (known) way to get the original PLAINTEXT from the hash. Small
1150 changes in the PLAINTEXT or SALT will result in large changes in the
1153 There is no decrypt function. This function isn't all that useful for
1154 cryptography (for that, look for F<Crypt> modules on your nearby CPAN
1155 mirror) and the name "crypt" is a bit of a misnomer. Instead it is
1156 primarily used to check if two pieces of text are the same without
1157 having to transmit or store the text itself. An example is checking
1158 if a correct password is given. The digest of the password is stored,
1159 not the password itself. The user types in a password that is
1160 crypt()'d with the same salt as the stored digest. If the two digests
1161 match, the password is correct.
1163 When verifying an existing digest string you should use the digest as
1164 the salt (like C<crypt($plain, $digest) eq $digest>). The SALT used
1165 to create the digest is visible as part of the digest. This ensures
1166 crypt() will hash the new string with the same salt as the digest.
1167 This allows your code to work with the standard L<crypt|/crypt> and
1168 with more exotic implementations. In other words, assume
1169 nothing about the returned string itself nor about how many bytes
1172 Traditionally the result is a string of 13 bytes: two first bytes of
1173 the salt, followed by 11 bytes from the set C<[./0-9A-Za-z]>, and only
1174 the first eight bytes of PLAINTEXT mattered. But alternative
1175 hashing schemes (like MD5), higher level security schemes (like C2),
1176 and implementations on non-Unix platforms may produce different
1179 When choosing a new salt create a random two character string whose
1180 characters come from the set C<[./0-9A-Za-z]> (like C<join '', ('.',
1181 '/', 0..9, 'A'..'Z', 'a'..'z')[rand 64, rand 64]>). This set of
1182 characters is just a recommendation; the characters allowed in
1183 the salt depend solely on your system's crypt library, and Perl can't
1184 restrict what salts C<crypt()> accepts.
1186 Here's an example that makes sure that whoever runs this program knows
1189 $pwd = (getpwuid($<))[1];
1191 system "stty -echo";
1193 chomp($word = <STDIN>);
1197 if (crypt($word, $pwd) ne $pwd) {
1203 Of course, typing in your own password to whoever asks you
1206 The L<crypt|/crypt> function is unsuitable for hashing large quantities
1207 of data, not least of all because you can't get the information
1208 back. Look at the L<Digest> module for more robust algorithms.
1210 If using crypt() on a Unicode string (which I<potentially> has
1211 characters with codepoints above 255), Perl tries to make sense
1212 of the situation by trying to downgrade (a copy of)
1213 the string back to an eight-bit byte string before calling crypt()
1214 (on that copy). If that works, good. If not, crypt() dies with
1215 C<Wide character in crypt>.
1217 Portability issues: L<perlport/crypt>.
1222 =for Pod::Functions breaks binding on a tied dbm file
1224 [This function has been largely superseded by the C<untie> function.]
1226 Breaks the binding between a DBM file and a hash.
1228 Portability issues: L<perlport/dbmclose>.
1230 =item dbmopen HASH,DBNAME,MASK
1231 X<dbmopen> X<dbm> X<ndbm> X<sdbm> X<gdbm>
1233 =for Pod::Functions create binding on a tied dbm file
1235 [This function has been largely superseded by the
1236 L<tie|/tie VARIABLE,CLASSNAME,LIST> function.]
1238 This binds a dbm(3), ndbm(3), sdbm(3), gdbm(3), or Berkeley DB file to a
1239 hash. HASH is the name of the hash. (Unlike normal C<open>, the first
1240 argument is I<not> a filehandle, even though it looks like one). DBNAME
1241 is the name of the database (without the F<.dir> or F<.pag> extension if
1242 any). If the database does not exist, it is created with protection
1243 specified by MASK (as modified by the C<umask>). To prevent creation of
1244 the database if it doesn't exist, you may specify a MODE
1245 of 0, and the function will return a false value if it
1246 can't find an existing database. If your system supports
1247 only the older DBM functions, you may make only one C<dbmopen> call in your
1248 program. In older versions of Perl, if your system had neither DBM nor
1249 ndbm, calling C<dbmopen> produced a fatal error; it now falls back to
1252 If you don't have write access to the DBM file, you can only read hash
1253 variables, not set them. If you want to test whether you can write,
1254 either use file tests or try setting a dummy hash entry inside an C<eval>
1257 Note that functions such as C<keys> and C<values> may return huge lists
1258 when used on large DBM files. You may prefer to use the C<each>
1259 function to iterate over large DBM files. Example:
1261 # print out history file offsets
1262 dbmopen(%HIST,'/usr/lib/news/history',0666);
1263 while (($key,$val) = each %HIST) {
1264 print $key, ' = ', unpack('L',$val), "\n";
1268 See also L<AnyDBM_File> for a more general description of the pros and
1269 cons of the various dbm approaches, as well as L<DB_File> for a particularly
1270 rich implementation.
1272 You can control which DBM library you use by loading that library
1273 before you call dbmopen():
1276 dbmopen(%NS_Hist, "$ENV{HOME}/.netscape/history.db")
1277 or die "Can't open netscape history file: $!";
1279 Portability issues: L<perlport/dbmopen>.
1282 X<defined> X<undef> X<undefined>
1286 =for Pod::Functions test whether a value, variable, or function is defined
1288 Returns a Boolean value telling whether EXPR has a value other than
1289 the undefined value C<undef>. If EXPR is not present, C<$_> is
1292 Many operations return C<undef> to indicate failure, end of file,
1293 system error, uninitialized variable, and other exceptional
1294 conditions. This function allows you to distinguish C<undef> from
1295 other values. (A simple Boolean test will not distinguish among
1296 C<undef>, zero, the empty string, and C<"0">, which are all equally
1297 false.) Note that since C<undef> is a valid scalar, its presence
1298 doesn't I<necessarily> indicate an exceptional condition: C<pop>
1299 returns C<undef> when its argument is an empty array, I<or> when the
1300 element to return happens to be C<undef>.
1302 You may also use C<defined(&func)> to check whether subroutine C<&func>
1303 has ever been defined. The return value is unaffected by any forward
1304 declarations of C<&func>. A subroutine that is not defined
1305 may still be callable: its package may have an C<AUTOLOAD> method that
1306 makes it spring into existence the first time that it is called; see
1309 Use of C<defined> on aggregates (hashes and arrays) is deprecated. It
1310 used to report whether memory for that aggregate had ever been
1311 allocated. This behavior may disappear in future versions of Perl.
1312 You should instead use a simple test for size:
1314 if (@an_array) { print "has array elements\n" }
1315 if (%a_hash) { print "has hash members\n" }
1317 When used on a hash element, it tells you whether the value is defined,
1318 not whether the key exists in the hash. Use L</exists> for the latter
1323 print if defined $switch{D};
1324 print "$val\n" while defined($val = pop(@ary));
1325 die "Can't readlink $sym: $!"
1326 unless defined($value = readlink $sym);
1327 sub foo { defined &$bar ? &$bar(@_) : die "No bar"; }
1328 $debugging = 0 unless defined $debugging;
1330 Note: Many folks tend to overuse C<defined> and are then surprised to
1331 discover that the number C<0> and C<""> (the zero-length string) are, in fact,
1332 defined values. For example, if you say
1336 The pattern match succeeds and C<$1> is defined, although it
1337 matched "nothing". It didn't really fail to match anything. Rather, it
1338 matched something that happened to be zero characters long. This is all
1339 very above-board and honest. When a function returns an undefined value,
1340 it's an admission that it couldn't give you an honest answer. So you
1341 should use C<defined> only when questioning the integrity of what
1342 you're trying to do. At other times, a simple comparison to C<0> or C<""> is
1345 See also L</undef>, L</exists>, L</ref>.
1350 =for Pod::Functions deletes a value from a hash
1352 Given an expression that specifies an element or slice of a hash, C<delete>
1353 deletes the specified elements from that hash so that exists() on that element
1354 no longer returns true. Setting a hash element to the undefined value does
1355 not remove its key, but deleting it does; see L</exists>.
1357 In list context, returns the value or values deleted, or the last such
1358 element in scalar context. The return list's length always matches that of
1359 the argument list: deleting non-existent elements returns the undefined value
1360 in their corresponding positions.
1362 delete() may also be used on arrays and array slices, but its behavior is less
1363 straightforward. Although exists() will return false for deleted entries,
1364 deleting array elements never changes indices of existing values; use shift()
1365 or splice() for that. However, if all deleted elements fall at the end of an
1366 array, the array's size shrinks to the position of the highest element that
1367 still tests true for exists(), or to 0 if none do.
1369 B<WARNING:> Calling delete on array values is deprecated and likely to
1370 be removed in a future version of Perl.
1372 Deleting from C<%ENV> modifies the environment. Deleting from a hash tied to
1373 a DBM file deletes the entry from the DBM file. Deleting from a C<tied> hash
1374 or array may not necessarily return anything; it depends on the implementation
1375 of the C<tied> package's DELETE method, which may do whatever it pleases.
1377 The C<delete local EXPR> construct localizes the deletion to the current
1378 block at run time. Until the block exits, elements locally deleted
1379 temporarily no longer exist. See L<perlsub/"Localized deletion of elements
1380 of composite types">.
1382 %hash = (foo => 11, bar => 22, baz => 33);
1383 $scalar = delete $hash{foo}; # $scalar is 11
1384 $scalar = delete @hash{qw(foo bar)}; # $scalar is 22
1385 @array = delete @hash{qw(foo baz)}; # @array is (undef,33)
1387 The following (inefficiently) deletes all the values of %HASH and @ARRAY:
1389 foreach $key (keys %HASH) {
1393 foreach $index (0 .. $#ARRAY) {
1394 delete $ARRAY[$index];
1399 delete @HASH{keys %HASH};
1401 delete @ARRAY[0 .. $#ARRAY];
1403 But both are slower than assigning the empty list
1404 or undefining %HASH or @ARRAY, which is the customary
1405 way to empty out an aggregate:
1407 %HASH = (); # completely empty %HASH
1408 undef %HASH; # forget %HASH ever existed
1410 @ARRAY = (); # completely empty @ARRAY
1411 undef @ARRAY; # forget @ARRAY ever existed
1413 The EXPR can be arbitrarily complicated provided its
1414 final operation is an element or slice of an aggregate:
1416 delete $ref->[$x][$y]{$key};
1417 delete @{$ref->[$x][$y]}{$key1, $key2, @morekeys};
1419 delete $ref->[$x][$y][$index];
1420 delete @{$ref->[$x][$y]}[$index1, $index2, @moreindices];
1423 X<die> X<throw> X<exception> X<raise> X<$@> X<abort>
1425 =for Pod::Functions raise an exception or bail out
1427 C<die> raises an exception. Inside an C<eval> the error message is stuffed
1428 into C<$@> and the C<eval> is terminated with the undefined value.
1429 If the exception is outside of all enclosing C<eval>s, then the uncaught
1430 exception prints LIST to C<STDERR> and exits with a non-zero value. If you
1431 need to exit the process with a specific exit code, see L</exit>.
1433 Equivalent examples:
1435 die "Can't cd to spool: $!\n" unless chdir '/usr/spool/news';
1436 chdir '/usr/spool/news' or die "Can't cd to spool: $!\n"
1438 If the last element of LIST does not end in a newline, the current
1439 script line number and input line number (if any) are also printed,
1440 and a newline is supplied. Note that the "input line number" (also
1441 known as "chunk") is subject to whatever notion of "line" happens to
1442 be currently in effect, and is also available as the special variable
1443 C<$.>. See L<perlvar/"$/"> and L<perlvar/"$.">.
1445 Hint: sometimes appending C<", stopped"> to your message will cause it
1446 to make better sense when the string C<"at foo line 123"> is appended.
1447 Suppose you are running script "canasta".
1449 die "/etc/games is no good";
1450 die "/etc/games is no good, stopped";
1452 produce, respectively
1454 /etc/games is no good at canasta line 123.
1455 /etc/games is no good, stopped at canasta line 123.
1457 If the output is empty and C<$@> already contains a value (typically from a
1458 previous eval) that value is reused after appending C<"\t...propagated">.
1459 This is useful for propagating exceptions:
1462 die unless $@ =~ /Expected exception/;
1464 If the output is empty and C<$@> contains an object reference that has a
1465 C<PROPAGATE> method, that method will be called with additional file
1466 and line number parameters. The return value replaces the value in
1467 C<$@>; i.e., as if C<< $@ = eval { $@->PROPAGATE(__FILE__, __LINE__) }; >>
1470 If C<$@> is empty then the string C<"Died"> is used.
1472 If an uncaught exception results in interpreter exit, the exit code is
1473 determined from the values of C<$!> and C<$?> with this pseudocode:
1475 exit $! if $!; # errno
1476 exit $? >> 8 if $? >> 8; # child exit status
1477 exit 255; # last resort
1479 The intent is to squeeze as much possible information about the likely cause
1480 into the limited space of the system exit
1481 code. However, as C<$!> is the value
1482 of C's C<errno>, which can be set by any system call, this means that the value
1483 of the exit code used by C<die> can be non-predictable, so should not be relied
1484 upon, other than to be non-zero.
1486 You can also call C<die> with a reference argument, and if this is trapped
1487 within an C<eval>, C<$@> contains that reference. This permits more
1488 elaborate exception handling using objects that maintain arbitrary state
1489 about the exception. Such a scheme is sometimes preferable to matching
1490 particular string values of C<$@> with regular expressions. Because C<$@>
1491 is a global variable and C<eval> may be used within object implementations,
1492 be careful that analyzing the error object doesn't replace the reference in
1493 the global variable. It's easiest to make a local copy of the reference
1494 before any manipulations. Here's an example:
1496 use Scalar::Util "blessed";
1498 eval { ... ; die Some::Module::Exception->new( FOO => "bar" ) };
1499 if (my $ev_err = $@) {
1500 if (blessed($ev_err)
1501 && $ev_err->isa("Some::Module::Exception")) {
1502 # handle Some::Module::Exception
1505 # handle all other possible exceptions
1509 Because Perl stringifies uncaught exception messages before display,
1510 you'll probably want to overload stringification operations on
1511 exception objects. See L<overload> for details about that.
1513 You can arrange for a callback to be run just before the C<die>
1514 does its deed, by setting the C<$SIG{__DIE__}> hook. The associated
1515 handler is called with the error text and can change the error
1516 message, if it sees fit, by calling C<die> again. See
1517 L<perlvar/%SIG> for details on setting C<%SIG> entries, and
1518 L<"eval BLOCK"> for some examples. Although this feature was
1519 to be run only right before your program was to exit, this is not
1520 currently so: the C<$SIG{__DIE__}> hook is currently called
1521 even inside eval()ed blocks/strings! If one wants the hook to do
1522 nothing in such situations, put
1526 as the first line of the handler (see L<perlvar/$^S>). Because
1527 this promotes strange action at a distance, this counterintuitive
1528 behavior may be fixed in a future release.
1530 See also exit(), warn(), and the Carp module.
1535 =for Pod::Functions turn a BLOCK into a TERM
1537 Not really a function. Returns the value of the last command in the
1538 sequence of commands indicated by BLOCK. When modified by the C<while> or
1539 C<until> loop modifier, executes the BLOCK once before testing the loop
1540 condition. (On other statements the loop modifiers test the conditional
1543 C<do BLOCK> does I<not> count as a loop, so the loop control statements
1544 C<next>, C<last>, or C<redo> cannot be used to leave or restart the block.
1545 See L<perlsyn> for alternative strategies.
1547 =item do SUBROUTINE(LIST)
1550 This form of subroutine call is deprecated. SUBROUTINE can be a bareword
1556 Uses the value of EXPR as a filename and executes the contents of the
1557 file as a Perl script.
1565 except that it's more concise, runs no external processes, keeps track of
1567 filename for error messages, searches the C<@INC> directories, and updates
1568 C<%INC> if the file is found. See L<perlvar/@INC> and L<perlvar/%INC> for
1569 these variables. It also differs in that code evaluated with C<do FILENAME>
1570 cannot see lexicals in the enclosing scope; C<eval STRING> does. It's the
1571 same, however, in that it does reparse the file every time you call it,
1572 so you probably don't want to do this inside a loop.
1574 If C<do> can read the file but cannot compile it, it returns C<undef> and sets
1575 an error message in C<$@>. If C<do> cannot read the file, it returns undef
1576 and sets C<$!> to the error. Always check C<$@> first, as compilation
1577 could fail in a way that also sets C<$!>. If the file is successfully
1578 compiled, C<do> returns the value of the last expression evaluated.
1580 Inclusion of library modules is better done with the
1581 C<use> and C<require> operators, which also do automatic error checking
1582 and raise an exception if there's a problem.
1584 You might like to use C<do> to read in a program configuration
1585 file. Manual error checking can be done this way:
1587 # read in config files: system first, then user
1588 for $file ("/share/prog/defaults.rc",
1589 "$ENV{HOME}/.someprogrc")
1591 unless ($return = do $file) {
1592 warn "couldn't parse $file: $@" if $@;
1593 warn "couldn't do $file: $!" unless defined $return;
1594 warn "couldn't run $file" unless $return;
1599 X<dump> X<core> X<undump>
1605 =for Pod::Functions create an immediate core dump
1607 This function causes an immediate core dump. See also the B<-u>
1608 command-line switch in L<perlrun>, which does the same thing.
1609 Primarily this is so that you can use the B<undump> program (not
1610 supplied) to turn your core dump into an executable binary after
1611 having initialized all your variables at the beginning of the
1612 program. When the new binary is executed it will begin by executing
1613 a C<goto LABEL> (with all the restrictions that C<goto> suffers).
1614 Think of it as a goto with an intervening core dump and reincarnation.
1615 If C<LABEL> is omitted, restarts the program from the top. The
1616 C<dump EXPR> form, available starting in Perl 5.18.0, allows a name to be
1617 computed at run time, being otherwise identical to C<dump LABEL>.
1619 B<WARNING>: Any files opened at the time of the dump will I<not>
1620 be open any more when the program is reincarnated, with possible
1621 resulting confusion by Perl.
1623 This function is now largely obsolete, mostly because it's very hard to
1624 convert a core file into an executable. That's why you should now invoke
1625 it as C<CORE::dump()>, if you don't want to be warned against a possible
1628 Unlike most named operators, this has the same precedence as assignment.
1629 It is also exempt from the looks-like-a-function rule, so
1630 C<dump ("foo")."bar"> will cause "bar" to be part of the argument to
1633 Portability issues: L<perlport/dump>.
1636 X<each> X<hash, iterator>
1643 =for Pod::Functions retrieve the next key/value pair from a hash
1645 When called on a hash in list context, returns a 2-element list
1646 consisting of the key and value for the next element of a hash. In Perl
1647 5.12 and later only, it will also return the index and value for the next
1648 element of an array so that you can iterate over it; older Perls consider
1649 this a syntax error. When called in scalar context, returns only the key
1650 (not the value) in a hash, or the index in an array.
1652 Hash entries are returned in an apparently random order. The actual random
1653 order is specific to a given hash; the exact same series of operations
1654 on two hashes may result in a different order for each hash. Any insertion
1655 into the hash may change the order, as will any deletion, with the exception
1656 that the most recent key returned by C<each> or C<keys> may be deleted
1657 without changing the order. So long as a given hash is unmodified you may
1658 rely on C<keys>, C<values> and C<each> to repeatedly return the same order
1659 as each other. See L<perlsec/"Algorithmic Complexity Attacks"> for
1660 details on why hash order is randomized. Aside from the guarantees
1661 provided here the exact details of Perl's hash algorithm and the hash
1662 traversal order are subject to change in any release of Perl.
1664 After C<each> has returned all entries from the hash or array, the next
1665 call to C<each> returns the empty list in list context and C<undef> in
1666 scalar context; the next call following I<that> one restarts iteration.
1667 Each hash or array has its own internal iterator, accessed by C<each>,
1668 C<keys>, and C<values>. The iterator is implicitly reset when C<each> has
1669 reached the end as just described; it can be explicitly reset by calling
1670 C<keys> or C<values> on the hash or array. If you add or delete a hash's
1671 elements while iterating over it, entries may be skipped or duplicated--so
1672 don't do that. Exception: In the current implementation, it is always safe
1673 to delete the item most recently returned by C<each()>, so the following
1674 code works properly:
1676 while (($key, $value) = each %hash) {
1678 delete $hash{$key}; # This is safe
1681 This prints out your environment like the printenv(1) program,
1682 but in a different order:
1684 while (($key,$value) = each %ENV) {
1685 print "$key=$value\n";
1688 Starting with Perl 5.14, C<each> can take a scalar EXPR, which must hold
1689 reference to an unblessed hash or array. The argument will be dereferenced
1690 automatically. This aspect of C<each> is considered highly experimental.
1691 The exact behaviour may change in a future version of Perl.
1693 while (($key,$value) = each $hashref) { ... }
1695 As of Perl 5.18 you can use a bare C<each> in a C<while> loop,
1696 which will set C<$_> on every iteration.
1699 print "$_=$ENV{$_}\n";
1702 To avoid confusing would-be users of your code who are running earlier
1703 versions of Perl with mysterious syntax errors, put this sort of thing at
1704 the top of your file to signal that your code will work I<only> on Perls of
1707 use 5.012; # so keys/values/each work on arrays
1708 use 5.014; # so keys/values/each work on scalars (experimental)
1709 use 5.018; # so each assigns to $_ in a lone while test
1711 See also C<keys>, C<values>, and C<sort>.
1713 =item eof FILEHANDLE
1722 =for Pod::Functions test a filehandle for its end
1724 Returns 1 if the next read on FILEHANDLE will return end of file I<or> if
1725 FILEHANDLE is not open. FILEHANDLE may be an expression whose value
1726 gives the real filehandle. (Note that this function actually
1727 reads a character and then C<ungetc>s it, so isn't useful in an
1728 interactive context.) Do not read from a terminal file (or call
1729 C<eof(FILEHANDLE)> on it) after end-of-file is reached. File types such
1730 as terminals may lose the end-of-file condition if you do.
1732 An C<eof> without an argument uses the last file read. Using C<eof()>
1733 with empty parentheses is different. It refers to the pseudo file
1734 formed from the files listed on the command line and accessed via the
1735 C<< <> >> operator. Since C<< <> >> isn't explicitly opened,
1736 as a normal filehandle is, an C<eof()> before C<< <> >> has been
1737 used will cause C<@ARGV> to be examined to determine if input is
1738 available. Similarly, an C<eof()> after C<< <> >> has returned
1739 end-of-file will assume you are processing another C<@ARGV> list,
1740 and if you haven't set C<@ARGV>, will read input from C<STDIN>;
1741 see L<perlop/"I/O Operators">.
1743 In a C<< while (<>) >> loop, C<eof> or C<eof(ARGV)> can be used to
1744 detect the end of each file, whereas C<eof()> will detect the end
1745 of the very last file only. Examples:
1747 # reset line numbering on each input file
1749 next if /^\s*#/; # skip comments
1752 close ARGV if eof; # Not eof()!
1755 # insert dashes just before last line of last file
1757 if (eof()) { # check for end of last file
1758 print "--------------\n";
1761 last if eof(); # needed if we're reading from a terminal
1764 Practical hint: you almost never need to use C<eof> in Perl, because the
1765 input operators typically return C<undef> when they run out of data or
1769 X<eval> X<try> X<catch> X<evaluate> X<parse> X<execute>
1770 X<error, handling> X<exception, handling>
1776 =for Pod::Functions catch exceptions or compile and run code
1778 In the first form, the return value of EXPR is parsed and executed as if it
1779 were a little Perl program. The value of the expression (which is itself
1780 determined within scalar context) is first parsed, and if there were no
1781 errors, executed as a block within the lexical context of the current Perl
1782 program. This means, that in particular, any outer lexical variables are
1783 visible to it, and any package variable settings or subroutine and format
1784 definitions remain afterwards.
1786 Note that the value is parsed every time the C<eval> executes.
1787 If EXPR is omitted, evaluates C<$_>. This form is typically used to
1788 delay parsing and subsequent execution of the text of EXPR until run time.
1790 If the C<unicode_eval> feature is enabled (which is the default under a
1791 C<use 5.16> or higher declaration), EXPR or C<$_> is treated as a string of
1792 characters, so C<use utf8> declarations have no effect, and source filters
1793 are forbidden. In the absence of the C<unicode_eval> feature, the string
1794 will sometimes be treated as characters and sometimes as bytes, depending
1795 on the internal encoding, and source filters activated within the C<eval>
1796 exhibit the erratic, but historical, behaviour of affecting some outer file
1797 scope that is still compiling. See also the L</evalbytes> keyword, which
1798 always treats its input as a byte stream and works properly with source
1799 filters, and the L<feature> pragma.
1801 In the second form, the code within the BLOCK is parsed only once--at the
1802 same time the code surrounding the C<eval> itself was parsed--and executed
1803 within the context of the current Perl program. This form is typically
1804 used to trap exceptions more efficiently than the first (see below), while
1805 also providing the benefit of checking the code within BLOCK at compile
1808 The final semicolon, if any, may be omitted from the value of EXPR or within
1811 In both forms, the value returned is the value of the last expression
1812 evaluated inside the mini-program; a return statement may be also used, just
1813 as with subroutines. The expression providing the return value is evaluated
1814 in void, scalar, or list context, depending on the context of the C<eval>
1815 itself. See L</wantarray> for more on how the evaluation context can be
1818 If there is a syntax error or runtime error, or a C<die> statement is
1819 executed, C<eval> returns C<undef> in scalar context
1820 or an empty list in list context, and C<$@> is set to the error
1821 message. (Prior to 5.16, a bug caused C<undef> to be returned
1822 in list context for syntax errors, but not for runtime errors.)
1823 If there was no error, C<$@> is set to the empty string. A
1824 control flow operator like C<last> or C<goto> can bypass the setting of
1825 C<$@>. Beware that using C<eval> neither silences Perl from printing
1826 warnings to STDERR, nor does it stuff the text of warning messages into C<$@>.
1827 To do either of those, you have to use the C<$SIG{__WARN__}> facility, or
1828 turn off warnings inside the BLOCK or EXPR using S<C<no warnings 'all'>>.
1829 See L</warn>, L<perlvar>, L<warnings> and L<perllexwarn>.
1831 Note that, because C<eval> traps otherwise-fatal errors, it is useful for
1832 determining whether a particular feature (such as C<socket> or C<symlink>)
1833 is implemented. It is also Perl's exception-trapping mechanism, where
1834 the die operator is used to raise exceptions.
1836 If you want to trap errors when loading an XS module, some problems with
1837 the binary interface (such as Perl version skew) may be fatal even with
1838 C<eval> unless C<$ENV{PERL_DL_NONLAZY}> is set. See L<perlrun>.
1840 If the code to be executed doesn't vary, you may use the eval-BLOCK
1841 form to trap run-time errors without incurring the penalty of
1842 recompiling each time. The error, if any, is still returned in C<$@>.
1845 # make divide-by-zero nonfatal
1846 eval { $answer = $a / $b; }; warn $@ if $@;
1848 # same thing, but less efficient
1849 eval '$answer = $a / $b'; warn $@ if $@;
1851 # a compile-time error
1852 eval { $answer = }; # WRONG
1855 eval '$answer ='; # sets $@
1857 Using the C<eval{}> form as an exception trap in libraries does have some
1858 issues. Due to the current arguably broken state of C<__DIE__> hooks, you
1859 may wish not to trigger any C<__DIE__> hooks that user code may have installed.
1860 You can use the C<local $SIG{__DIE__}> construct for this purpose,
1861 as this example shows:
1863 # a private exception trap for divide-by-zero
1864 eval { local $SIG{'__DIE__'}; $answer = $a / $b; };
1867 This is especially significant, given that C<__DIE__> hooks can call
1868 C<die> again, which has the effect of changing their error messages:
1870 # __DIE__ hooks may modify error messages
1872 local $SIG{'__DIE__'} =
1873 sub { (my $x = $_[0]) =~ s/foo/bar/g; die $x };
1874 eval { die "foo lives here" };
1875 print $@ if $@; # prints "bar lives here"
1878 Because this promotes action at a distance, this counterintuitive behavior
1879 may be fixed in a future release.
1881 With an C<eval>, you should be especially careful to remember what's
1882 being looked at when:
1888 eval { $x }; # CASE 4
1890 eval "\$$x++"; # CASE 5
1893 Cases 1 and 2 above behave identically: they run the code contained in
1894 the variable $x. (Although case 2 has misleading double quotes making
1895 the reader wonder what else might be happening (nothing is).) Cases 3
1896 and 4 likewise behave in the same way: they run the code C<'$x'>, which
1897 does nothing but return the value of $x. (Case 4 is preferred for
1898 purely visual reasons, but it also has the advantage of compiling at
1899 compile-time instead of at run-time.) Case 5 is a place where
1900 normally you I<would> like to use double quotes, except that in this
1901 particular situation, you can just use symbolic references instead, as
1904 Before Perl 5.14, the assignment to C<$@> occurred before restoration
1905 of localized variables, which means that for your code to run on older
1906 versions, a temporary is required if you want to mask some but not all
1909 # alter $@ on nefarious repugnancy only
1913 local $@; # protect existing $@
1914 eval { test_repugnancy() };
1915 # $@ =~ /nefarious/ and die $@; # Perl 5.14 and higher only
1916 $@ =~ /nefarious/ and $e = $@;
1918 die $e if defined $e
1921 C<eval BLOCK> does I<not> count as a loop, so the loop control statements
1922 C<next>, C<last>, or C<redo> cannot be used to leave or restart the block.
1924 An C<eval ''> executed within a subroutine defined
1925 in the C<DB> package doesn't see the usual
1926 surrounding lexical scope, but rather the scope of the first non-DB piece
1927 of code that called it. You don't normally need to worry about this unless
1928 you are writing a Perl debugger.
1930 =item evalbytes EXPR
1935 =for Pod::Functions +evalbytes similar to string eval, but intend to parse a bytestream
1937 This function is like L</eval> with a string argument, except it always
1938 parses its argument, or C<$_> if EXPR is omitted, as a string of bytes. A
1939 string containing characters whose ordinal value exceeds 255 results in an
1940 error. Source filters activated within the evaluated code apply to the
1943 This function is only available under the C<evalbytes> feature, a
1944 C<use v5.16> (or higher) declaration, or with a C<CORE::> prefix. See
1945 L<feature> for more information.
1950 =item exec PROGRAM LIST
1952 =for Pod::Functions abandon this program to run another
1954 The C<exec> function executes a system command I<and never returns>;
1955 use C<system> instead of C<exec> if you want it to return. It fails and
1956 returns false only if the command does not exist I<and> it is executed
1957 directly instead of via your system's command shell (see below).
1959 Since it's a common mistake to use C<exec> instead of C<system>, Perl
1960 warns you if C<exec> is called in void context and if there is a following
1961 statement that isn't C<die>, C<warn>, or C<exit> (if C<-w> is set--but
1962 you always do that, right?). If you I<really> want to follow an C<exec>
1963 with some other statement, you can use one of these styles to avoid the warning:
1965 exec ('foo') or print STDERR "couldn't exec foo: $!";
1966 { exec ('foo') }; print STDERR "couldn't exec foo: $!";
1968 If there is more than one argument in LIST, or if LIST is an array
1969 with more than one value, calls execvp(3) with the arguments in LIST.
1970 If there is only one scalar argument or an array with one element in it,
1971 the argument is checked for shell metacharacters, and if there are any,
1972 the entire argument is passed to the system's command shell for parsing
1973 (this is C</bin/sh -c> on Unix platforms, but varies on other platforms).
1974 If there are no shell metacharacters in the argument, it is split into
1975 words and passed directly to C<execvp>, which is more efficient.
1978 exec '/bin/echo', 'Your arguments are: ', @ARGV;
1979 exec "sort $outfile | uniq";
1981 If you don't really want to execute the first argument, but want to lie
1982 to the program you are executing about its own name, you can specify
1983 the program you actually want to run as an "indirect object" (without a
1984 comma) in front of the LIST. (This always forces interpretation of the
1985 LIST as a multivalued list, even if there is only a single scalar in
1988 $shell = '/bin/csh';
1989 exec $shell '-sh'; # pretend it's a login shell
1993 exec {'/bin/csh'} '-sh'; # pretend it's a login shell
1995 When the arguments get executed via the system shell, results are
1996 subject to its quirks and capabilities. See L<perlop/"`STRING`">
1999 Using an indirect object with C<exec> or C<system> is also more
2000 secure. This usage (which also works fine with system()) forces
2001 interpretation of the arguments as a multivalued list, even if the
2002 list had just one argument. That way you're safe from the shell
2003 expanding wildcards or splitting up words with whitespace in them.
2005 @args = ( "echo surprise" );
2007 exec @args; # subject to shell escapes
2009 exec { $args[0] } @args; # safe even with one-arg list
2011 The first version, the one without the indirect object, ran the I<echo>
2012 program, passing it C<"surprise"> an argument. The second version didn't;
2013 it tried to run a program named I<"echo surprise">, didn't find it, and set
2014 C<$?> to a non-zero value indicating failure.
2016 Perl attempts to flush all files opened for output before the exec,
2017 but this may not be supported on some platforms (see L<perlport>).
2018 To be safe, you may need to set C<$|> ($AUTOFLUSH in English) or
2019 call the C<autoflush()> method of C<IO::Handle> on any open handles
2020 to avoid lost output.
2022 Note that C<exec> will not call your C<END> blocks, nor will it invoke
2023 C<DESTROY> methods on your objects.
2025 Portability issues: L<perlport/exec>.
2028 X<exists> X<autovivification>
2030 =for Pod::Functions test whether a hash key is present
2032 Given an expression that specifies an element of a hash, returns true if the
2033 specified element in the hash has ever been initialized, even if the
2034 corresponding value is undefined.
2036 print "Exists\n" if exists $hash{$key};
2037 print "Defined\n" if defined $hash{$key};
2038 print "True\n" if $hash{$key};
2040 exists may also be called on array elements, but its behavior is much less
2041 obvious and is strongly tied to the use of L</delete> on arrays. B<Be aware>
2042 that calling exists on array values is deprecated and likely to be removed in
2043 a future version of Perl.
2045 print "Exists\n" if exists $array[$index];
2046 print "Defined\n" if defined $array[$index];
2047 print "True\n" if $array[$index];
2049 A hash or array element can be true only if it's defined and defined only if
2050 it exists, but the reverse doesn't necessarily hold true.
2052 Given an expression that specifies the name of a subroutine,
2053 returns true if the specified subroutine has ever been declared, even
2054 if it is undefined. Mentioning a subroutine name for exists or defined
2055 does not count as declaring it. Note that a subroutine that does not
2056 exist may still be callable: its package may have an C<AUTOLOAD>
2057 method that makes it spring into existence the first time that it is
2058 called; see L<perlsub>.
2060 print "Exists\n" if exists &subroutine;
2061 print "Defined\n" if defined &subroutine;
2063 Note that the EXPR can be arbitrarily complicated as long as the final
2064 operation is a hash or array key lookup or subroutine name:
2066 if (exists $ref->{A}->{B}->{$key}) { }
2067 if (exists $hash{A}{B}{$key}) { }
2069 if (exists $ref->{A}->{B}->[$ix]) { }
2070 if (exists $hash{A}{B}[$ix]) { }
2072 if (exists &{$ref->{A}{B}{$key}}) { }
2074 Although the most deeply nested array or hash element will not spring into
2075 existence just because its existence was tested, any intervening ones will.
2076 Thus C<< $ref->{"A"} >> and C<< $ref->{"A"}->{"B"} >> will spring
2077 into existence due to the existence test for the $key element above.
2078 This happens anywhere the arrow operator is used, including even here:
2081 if (exists $ref->{"Some key"}) { }
2082 print $ref; # prints HASH(0x80d3d5c)
2084 This surprising autovivification in what does not at first--or even
2085 second--glance appear to be an lvalue context may be fixed in a future
2088 Use of a subroutine call, rather than a subroutine name, as an argument
2089 to exists() is an error.
2092 exists &sub(); # Error
2095 X<exit> X<terminate> X<abort>
2099 =for Pod::Functions terminate this program
2101 Evaluates EXPR and exits immediately with that value. Example:
2104 exit 0 if $ans =~ /^[Xx]/;
2106 See also C<die>. If EXPR is omitted, exits with C<0> status. The only
2107 universally recognized values for EXPR are C<0> for success and C<1>
2108 for error; other values are subject to interpretation depending on the
2109 environment in which the Perl program is running. For example, exiting
2110 69 (EX_UNAVAILABLE) from a I<sendmail> incoming-mail filter will cause
2111 the mailer to return the item undelivered, but that's not true everywhere.
2113 Don't use C<exit> to abort a subroutine if there's any chance that
2114 someone might want to trap whatever error happened. Use C<die> instead,
2115 which can be trapped by an C<eval>.
2117 The exit() function does not always exit immediately. It calls any
2118 defined C<END> routines first, but these C<END> routines may not
2119 themselves abort the exit. Likewise any object destructors that need to
2120 be called are called before the real exit. C<END> routines and destructors
2121 can change the exit status by modifying C<$?>. If this is a problem, you
2122 can call C<POSIX::_exit($status)> to avoid END and destructor processing.
2123 See L<perlmod> for details.
2125 Portability issues: L<perlport/exit>.
2128 X<exp> X<exponential> X<antilog> X<antilogarithm> X<e>
2132 =for Pod::Functions raise I<e> to a power
2134 Returns I<e> (the natural logarithm base) to the power of EXPR.
2135 If EXPR is omitted, gives C<exp($_)>.
2138 X<fc> X<foldcase> X<casefold> X<fold-case> X<case-fold>
2142 =for Pod::Functions +fc return casefolded version of a string
2144 Returns the casefolded version of EXPR. This is the internal function
2145 implementing the C<\F> escape in double-quoted strings.
2147 Casefolding is the process of mapping strings to a form where case
2148 differences are erased; comparing two strings in their casefolded
2149 form is effectively a way of asking if two strings are equal,
2152 Roughly, if you ever found yourself writing this
2154 lc($this) eq lc($that) # Wrong!
2156 uc($this) eq uc($that) # Also wrong!
2158 $this =~ /^\Q$that\E\z/i # Right!
2162 fc($this) eq fc($that)
2164 And get the correct results.
2166 Perl only implements the full form of casefolding,
2167 but you can access the simple folds using L<Unicode::UCD/casefold()> and
2168 L<Unicode::UCD/prop_invmap()>.
2169 For further information on casefolding, refer to
2170 the Unicode Standard, specifically sections 3.13 C<Default Case Operations>,
2171 4.2 C<Case-Normative>, and 5.18 C<Case Mappings>,
2172 available at L<http://www.unicode.org/versions/latest/>, as well as the
2173 Case Charts available at L<http://www.unicode.org/charts/case/>.
2175 If EXPR is omitted, uses C<$_>.
2177 This function behaves the same way under various pragma, such as within
2178 S<C<"use feature 'unicode_strings">>, as L</lc> does, with the single
2179 exception of C<fc> of LATIN CAPITAL LETTER SHARP S (U+1E9E) within the
2180 scope of S<C<use locale>>. The foldcase of this character would
2181 normally be C<"ss">, but as explained in the L</lc> section, case
2182 changes that cross the 255/256 boundary are problematic under locales,
2183 and are hence prohibited. Therefore, this function under locale returns
2184 instead the string C<"\x{17F}\x{17F}">, which is the LATIN SMALL LETTER
2185 LONG S. Since that character itself folds to C<"s">, the string of two
2186 of them together should be equivalent to a single U+1E9E when foldcased.
2188 While the Unicode Standard defines two additional forms of casefolding,
2189 one for Turkic languages and one that never maps one character into multiple
2190 characters, these are not provided by the Perl core; However, the CPAN module
2191 C<Unicode::Casing> may be used to provide an implementation.
2193 This keyword is available only when the C<"fc"> feature is enabled,
2194 or when prefixed with C<CORE::>; See L<feature>. Alternately,
2195 include a C<use v5.16> or later to the current scope.
2197 =item fcntl FILEHANDLE,FUNCTION,SCALAR
2200 =for Pod::Functions file control system call
2202 Implements the fcntl(2) function. You'll probably have to say
2206 first to get the correct constant definitions. Argument processing and
2207 value returned work just like C<ioctl> below.
2211 fcntl($filehandle, F_GETFL, $packed_return_buffer)
2212 or die "can't fcntl F_GETFL: $!";
2214 You don't have to check for C<defined> on the return from C<fcntl>.
2215 Like C<ioctl>, it maps a C<0> return from the system call into
2216 C<"0 but true"> in Perl. This string is true in boolean context and C<0>
2217 in numeric context. It is also exempt from the normal B<-w> warnings
2218 on improper numeric conversions.
2220 Note that C<fcntl> raises an exception if used on a machine that
2221 doesn't implement fcntl(2). See the Fcntl module or your fcntl(2)
2222 manpage to learn what functions are available on your system.
2224 Here's an example of setting a filehandle named C<REMOTE> to be
2225 non-blocking at the system level. You'll have to negotiate C<$|>
2226 on your own, though.
2228 use Fcntl qw(F_GETFL F_SETFL O_NONBLOCK);
2230 $flags = fcntl(REMOTE, F_GETFL, 0)
2231 or die "Can't get flags for the socket: $!\n";
2233 $flags = fcntl(REMOTE, F_SETFL, $flags | O_NONBLOCK)
2234 or die "Can't set flags for the socket: $!\n";
2236 Portability issues: L<perlport/fcntl>.
2241 =for Pod::Functions the name of the current source file
2243 A special token that returns the name of the file in which it occurs.
2245 =item fileno FILEHANDLE
2248 =for Pod::Functions return file descriptor from filehandle
2250 Returns the file descriptor for a filehandle, or undefined if the
2251 filehandle is not open. If there is no real file descriptor at the OS
2252 level, as can happen with filehandles connected to memory objects via
2253 C<open> with a reference for the third argument, -1 is returned.
2255 This is mainly useful for constructing
2256 bitmaps for C<select> and low-level POSIX tty-handling operations.
2257 If FILEHANDLE is an expression, the value is taken as an indirect
2258 filehandle, generally its name.
2260 You can use this to find out whether two handles refer to the
2261 same underlying descriptor:
2263 if (fileno(THIS) == fileno(THAT)) {
2264 print "THIS and THAT are dups\n";
2267 =item flock FILEHANDLE,OPERATION
2268 X<flock> X<lock> X<locking>
2270 =for Pod::Functions lock an entire file with an advisory lock
2272 Calls flock(2), or an emulation of it, on FILEHANDLE. Returns true
2273 for success, false on failure. Produces a fatal error if used on a
2274 machine that doesn't implement flock(2), fcntl(2) locking, or lockf(3).
2275 C<flock> is Perl's portable file-locking interface, although it locks
2276 entire files only, not records.
2278 Two potentially non-obvious but traditional C<flock> semantics are
2279 that it waits indefinitely until the lock is granted, and that its locks
2280 are B<merely advisory>. Such discretionary locks are more flexible, but
2281 offer fewer guarantees. This means that programs that do not also use
2282 C<flock> may modify files locked with C<flock>. See L<perlport>,
2283 your port's specific documentation, and your system-specific local manpages
2284 for details. It's best to assume traditional behavior if you're writing
2285 portable programs. (But if you're not, you should as always feel perfectly
2286 free to write for your own system's idiosyncrasies (sometimes called
2287 "features"). Slavish adherence to portability concerns shouldn't get
2288 in the way of your getting your job done.)
2290 OPERATION is one of LOCK_SH, LOCK_EX, or LOCK_UN, possibly combined with
2291 LOCK_NB. These constants are traditionally valued 1, 2, 8 and 4, but
2292 you can use the symbolic names if you import them from the L<Fcntl> module,
2293 either individually, or as a group using the C<:flock> tag. LOCK_SH
2294 requests a shared lock, LOCK_EX requests an exclusive lock, and LOCK_UN
2295 releases a previously requested lock. If LOCK_NB is bitwise-or'ed with
2296 LOCK_SH or LOCK_EX, then C<flock> returns immediately rather than blocking
2297 waiting for the lock; check the return status to see if you got it.
2299 To avoid the possibility of miscoordination, Perl now flushes FILEHANDLE
2300 before locking or unlocking it.
2302 Note that the emulation built with lockf(3) doesn't provide shared
2303 locks, and it requires that FILEHANDLE be open with write intent. These
2304 are the semantics that lockf(3) implements. Most if not all systems
2305 implement lockf(3) in terms of fcntl(2) locking, though, so the
2306 differing semantics shouldn't bite too many people.
2308 Note that the fcntl(2) emulation of flock(3) requires that FILEHANDLE
2309 be open with read intent to use LOCK_SH and requires that it be open
2310 with write intent to use LOCK_EX.
2312 Note also that some versions of C<flock> cannot lock things over the
2313 network; you would need to use the more system-specific C<fcntl> for
2314 that. If you like you can force Perl to ignore your system's flock(2)
2315 function, and so provide its own fcntl(2)-based emulation, by passing
2316 the switch C<-Ud_flock> to the F<Configure> program when you configure
2317 and build a new Perl.
2319 Here's a mailbox appender for BSD systems.
2321 # import LOCK_* and SEEK_END constants
2322 use Fcntl qw(:flock SEEK_END);
2326 flock($fh, LOCK_EX) or die "Cannot lock mailbox - $!\n";
2328 # and, in case someone appended while we were waiting...
2329 seek($fh, 0, SEEK_END) or die "Cannot seek - $!\n";
2334 flock($fh, LOCK_UN) or die "Cannot unlock mailbox - $!\n";
2337 open(my $mbox, ">>", "/usr/spool/mail/$ENV{'USER'}")
2338 or die "Can't open mailbox: $!";
2341 print $mbox $msg,"\n\n";
2344 On systems that support a real flock(2), locks are inherited across fork()
2345 calls, whereas those that must resort to the more capricious fcntl(2)
2346 function lose their locks, making it seriously harder to write servers.
2348 See also L<DB_File> for other flock() examples.
2350 Portability issues: L<perlport/flock>.
2353 X<fork> X<child> X<parent>
2355 =for Pod::Functions create a new process just like this one
2357 Does a fork(2) system call to create a new process running the
2358 same program at the same point. It returns the child pid to the
2359 parent process, C<0> to the child process, or C<undef> if the fork is
2360 unsuccessful. File descriptors (and sometimes locks on those descriptors)
2361 are shared, while everything else is copied. On most systems supporting
2362 fork(), great care has gone into making it extremely efficient (for
2363 example, using copy-on-write technology on data pages), making it the
2364 dominant paradigm for multitasking over the last few decades.
2366 Perl attempts to flush all files opened for
2367 output before forking the child process, but this may not be supported
2368 on some platforms (see L<perlport>). To be safe, you may need to set
2369 C<$|> ($AUTOFLUSH in English) or call the C<autoflush()> method of
2370 C<IO::Handle> on any open handles to avoid duplicate output.
2372 If you C<fork> without ever waiting on your children, you will
2373 accumulate zombies. On some systems, you can avoid this by setting
2374 C<$SIG{CHLD}> to C<"IGNORE">. See also L<perlipc> for more examples of
2375 forking and reaping moribund children.
2377 Note that if your forked child inherits system file descriptors like
2378 STDIN and STDOUT that are actually connected by a pipe or socket, even
2379 if you exit, then the remote server (such as, say, a CGI script or a
2380 backgrounded job launched from a remote shell) won't think you're done.
2381 You should reopen those to F</dev/null> if it's any issue.
2383 On some platforms such as Windows, where the fork() system call is not available,
2384 Perl can be built to emulate fork() in the Perl interpreter.
2385 The emulation is designed, at the level of the Perl program,
2386 to be as compatible as possible with the "Unix" fork().
2387 However it has limitations that have to be considered in code intended to be portable.
2388 See L<perlfork> for more details.
2390 Portability issues: L<perlport/fork>.
2395 =for Pod::Functions declare a picture format with use by the write() function
2397 Declare a picture format for use by the C<write> function. For
2401 Test: @<<<<<<<< @||||| @>>>>>
2402 $str, $%, '$' . int($num)
2406 $num = $cost/$quantity;
2410 See L<perlform> for many details and examples.
2412 =item formline PICTURE,LIST
2415 =for Pod::Functions internal function used for formats
2417 This is an internal function used by C<format>s, though you may call it,
2418 too. It formats (see L<perlform>) a list of values according to the
2419 contents of PICTURE, placing the output into the format output
2420 accumulator, C<$^A> (or C<$ACCUMULATOR> in English).
2421 Eventually, when a C<write> is done, the contents of
2422 C<$^A> are written to some filehandle. You could also read C<$^A>
2423 and then set C<$^A> back to C<"">. Note that a format typically
2424 does one C<formline> per line of form, but the C<formline> function itself
2425 doesn't care how many newlines are embedded in the PICTURE. This means
2426 that the C<~> and C<~~> tokens treat the entire PICTURE as a single line.
2427 You may therefore need to use multiple formlines to implement a single
2428 record format, just like the C<format> compiler.
2430 Be careful if you put double quotes around the picture, because an C<@>
2431 character may be taken to mean the beginning of an array name.
2432 C<formline> always returns true. See L<perlform> for other examples.
2434 If you are trying to use this instead of C<write> to capture the output,
2435 you may find it easier to open a filehandle to a scalar
2436 (C<< open $fh, ">", \$output >>) and write to that instead.
2438 =item getc FILEHANDLE
2439 X<getc> X<getchar> X<character> X<file, read>
2443 =for Pod::Functions get the next character from the filehandle
2445 Returns the next character from the input file attached to FILEHANDLE,
2446 or the undefined value at end of file or if there was an error (in
2447 the latter case C<$!> is set). If FILEHANDLE is omitted, reads from
2448 STDIN. This is not particularly efficient. However, it cannot be
2449 used by itself to fetch single characters without waiting for the user
2450 to hit enter. For that, try something more like:
2453 system "stty cbreak </dev/tty >/dev/tty 2>&1";
2456 system "stty", '-icanon', 'eol', "\001";
2462 system "stty -cbreak </dev/tty >/dev/tty 2>&1";
2465 system 'stty', 'icanon', 'eol', '^@'; # ASCII NUL
2469 Determination of whether $BSD_STYLE should be set
2470 is left as an exercise to the reader.
2472 The C<POSIX::getattr> function can do this more portably on
2473 systems purporting POSIX compliance. See also the C<Term::ReadKey>
2474 module from your nearest CPAN site; details on CPAN can be found under
2478 X<getlogin> X<login>
2480 =for Pod::Functions return who logged in at this tty
2482 This implements the C library function of the same name, which on most
2483 systems returns the current login from F</etc/utmp>, if any. If it
2484 returns the empty string, use C<getpwuid>.
2486 $login = getlogin || getpwuid($<) || "Kilroy";
2488 Do not consider C<getlogin> for authentication: it is not as
2489 secure as C<getpwuid>.
2491 Portability issues: L<perlport/getlogin>.
2493 =item getpeername SOCKET
2494 X<getpeername> X<peer>
2496 =for Pod::Functions find the other end of a socket connection
2498 Returns the packed sockaddr address of the other end of the SOCKET
2502 $hersockaddr = getpeername(SOCK);
2503 ($port, $iaddr) = sockaddr_in($hersockaddr);
2504 $herhostname = gethostbyaddr($iaddr, AF_INET);
2505 $herstraddr = inet_ntoa($iaddr);
2510 =for Pod::Functions get process group
2512 Returns the current process group for the specified PID. Use
2513 a PID of C<0> to get the current process group for the
2514 current process. Will raise an exception if used on a machine that
2515 doesn't implement getpgrp(2). If PID is omitted, returns the process
2516 group of the current process. Note that the POSIX version of C<getpgrp>
2517 does not accept a PID argument, so only C<PID==0> is truly portable.
2519 Portability issues: L<perlport/getpgrp>.
2522 X<getppid> X<parent> X<pid>
2524 =for Pod::Functions get parent process ID
2526 Returns the process id of the parent process.
2528 Note for Linux users: Between v5.8.1 and v5.16.0 Perl would work
2529 around non-POSIX thread semantics the minority of Linux systems (and
2530 Debian GNU/kFreeBSD systems) that used LinuxThreads, this emulation
2531 has since been removed. See the documentation for L<$$|perlvar/$$> for
2534 Portability issues: L<perlport/getppid>.
2536 =item getpriority WHICH,WHO
2537 X<getpriority> X<priority> X<nice>
2539 =for Pod::Functions get current nice value
2541 Returns the current priority for a process, a process group, or a user.
2542 (See L<getpriority(2)>.) Will raise a fatal exception if used on a
2543 machine that doesn't implement getpriority(2).
2545 Portability issues: L<perlport/getpriority>.
2548 X<getpwnam> X<getgrnam> X<gethostbyname> X<getnetbyname> X<getprotobyname>
2549 X<getpwuid> X<getgrgid> X<getservbyname> X<gethostbyaddr> X<getnetbyaddr>
2550 X<getprotobynumber> X<getservbyport> X<getpwent> X<getgrent> X<gethostent>
2551 X<getnetent> X<getprotoent> X<getservent> X<setpwent> X<setgrent> X<sethostent>
2552 X<setnetent> X<setprotoent> X<setservent> X<endpwent> X<endgrent> X<endhostent>
2553 X<endnetent> X<endprotoent> X<endservent>
2555 =for Pod::Functions get passwd record given user login name
2559 =for Pod::Functions get group record given group name
2561 =item gethostbyname NAME
2563 =for Pod::Functions get host record given name
2565 =item getnetbyname NAME
2567 =for Pod::Functions get networks record given name
2569 =item getprotobyname NAME
2571 =for Pod::Functions get protocol record given name
2575 =for Pod::Functions get passwd record given user ID
2579 =for Pod::Functions get group record given group user ID
2581 =item getservbyname NAME,PROTO
2583 =for Pod::Functions get services record given its name
2585 =item gethostbyaddr ADDR,ADDRTYPE
2587 =for Pod::Functions get host record given its address
2589 =item getnetbyaddr ADDR,ADDRTYPE
2591 =for Pod::Functions get network record given its address
2593 =item getprotobynumber NUMBER
2595 =for Pod::Functions get protocol record numeric protocol
2597 =item getservbyport PORT,PROTO
2599 =for Pod::Functions get services record given numeric port
2603 =for Pod::Functions get next passwd record
2607 =for Pod::Functions get next group record
2611 =for Pod::Functions get next hosts record
2615 =for Pod::Functions get next networks record
2619 =for Pod::Functions get next protocols record
2623 =for Pod::Functions get next services record
2627 =for Pod::Functions prepare passwd file for use
2631 =for Pod::Functions prepare group file for use
2633 =item sethostent STAYOPEN
2635 =for Pod::Functions prepare hosts file for use
2637 =item setnetent STAYOPEN
2639 =for Pod::Functions prepare networks file for use
2641 =item setprotoent STAYOPEN
2643 =for Pod::Functions prepare protocols file for use
2645 =item setservent STAYOPEN
2647 =for Pod::Functions prepare services file for use
2651 =for Pod::Functions be done using passwd file
2655 =for Pod::Functions be done using group file
2659 =for Pod::Functions be done using hosts file
2663 =for Pod::Functions be done using networks file
2667 =for Pod::Functions be done using protocols file
2671 =for Pod::Functions be done using services file
2673 These routines are the same as their counterparts in the
2674 system C library. In list context, the return values from the
2675 various get routines are as follows:
2677 ($name,$passwd,$uid,$gid,
2678 $quota,$comment,$gcos,$dir,$shell,$expire) = getpw*
2679 ($name,$passwd,$gid,$members) = getgr*
2680 ($name,$aliases,$addrtype,$length,@addrs) = gethost*
2681 ($name,$aliases,$addrtype,$net) = getnet*
2682 ($name,$aliases,$proto) = getproto*
2683 ($name,$aliases,$port,$proto) = getserv*
2685 (If the entry doesn't exist you get an empty list.)
2687 The exact meaning of the $gcos field varies but it usually contains
2688 the real name of the user (as opposed to the login name) and other
2689 information pertaining to the user. Beware, however, that in many
2690 system users are able to change this information and therefore it
2691 cannot be trusted and therefore the $gcos is tainted (see
2692 L<perlsec>). The $passwd and $shell, user's encrypted password and
2693 login shell, are also tainted, for the same reason.
2695 In scalar context, you get the name, unless the function was a
2696 lookup by name, in which case you get the other thing, whatever it is.
2697 (If the entry doesn't exist you get the undefined value.) For example:
2699 $uid = getpwnam($name);
2700 $name = getpwuid($num);
2702 $gid = getgrnam($name);
2703 $name = getgrgid($num);
2707 In I<getpw*()> the fields $quota, $comment, and $expire are special
2708 in that they are unsupported on many systems. If the
2709 $quota is unsupported, it is an empty scalar. If it is supported, it
2710 usually encodes the disk quota. If the $comment field is unsupported,
2711 it is an empty scalar. If it is supported it usually encodes some
2712 administrative comment about the user. In some systems the $quota
2713 field may be $change or $age, fields that have to do with password
2714 aging. In some systems the $comment field may be $class. The $expire
2715 field, if present, encodes the expiration period of the account or the
2716 password. For the availability and the exact meaning of these fields
2717 in your system, please consult getpwnam(3) and your system's
2718 F<pwd.h> file. You can also find out from within Perl what your
2719 $quota and $comment fields mean and whether you have the $expire field
2720 by using the C<Config> module and the values C<d_pwquota>, C<d_pwage>,
2721 C<d_pwchange>, C<d_pwcomment>, and C<d_pwexpire>. Shadow password
2722 files are supported only if your vendor has implemented them in the
2723 intuitive fashion that calling the regular C library routines gets the
2724 shadow versions if you're running under privilege or if there exists
2725 the shadow(3) functions as found in System V (this includes Solaris
2726 and Linux). Those systems that implement a proprietary shadow password
2727 facility are unlikely to be supported.
2729 The $members value returned by I<getgr*()> is a space-separated list of
2730 the login names of the members of the group.
2732 For the I<gethost*()> functions, if the C<h_errno> variable is supported in
2733 C, it will be returned to you via C<$?> if the function call fails. The
2734 C<@addrs> value returned by a successful call is a list of raw
2735 addresses returned by the corresponding library call. In the
2736 Internet domain, each address is four bytes long; you can unpack it
2737 by saying something like:
2739 ($a,$b,$c,$d) = unpack('W4',$addr[0]);
2741 The Socket library makes this slightly easier:
2744 $iaddr = inet_aton("127.1"); # or whatever address
2745 $name = gethostbyaddr($iaddr, AF_INET);
2747 # or going the other way
2748 $straddr = inet_ntoa($iaddr);
2750 In the opposite way, to resolve a hostname to the IP address
2754 $packed_ip = gethostbyname("www.perl.org");
2755 if (defined $packed_ip) {
2756 $ip_address = inet_ntoa($packed_ip);
2759 Make sure C<gethostbyname()> is called in SCALAR context and that
2760 its return value is checked for definedness.
2762 The C<getprotobynumber> function, even though it only takes one argument,
2763 has the precedence of a list operator, so beware:
2765 getprotobynumber $number eq 'icmp' # WRONG
2766 getprotobynumber($number eq 'icmp') # actually means this
2767 getprotobynumber($number) eq 'icmp' # better this way
2769 If you get tired of remembering which element of the return list
2770 contains which return value, by-name interfaces are provided
2771 in standard modules: C<File::stat>, C<Net::hostent>, C<Net::netent>,
2772 C<Net::protoent>, C<Net::servent>, C<Time::gmtime>, C<Time::localtime>,
2773 and C<User::grent>. These override the normal built-ins, supplying
2774 versions that return objects with the appropriate names
2775 for each field. For example:
2779 $is_his = (stat($filename)->uid == pwent($whoever)->uid);
2781 Even though it looks as though they're the same method calls (uid),
2782 they aren't, because a C<File::stat> object is different from
2783 a C<User::pwent> object.
2785 Portability issues: L<perlport/getpwnam> to L<perlport/endservent>.
2787 =item getsockname SOCKET
2790 =for Pod::Functions retrieve the sockaddr for a given socket
2792 Returns the packed sockaddr address of this end of the SOCKET connection,
2793 in case you don't know the address because you have several different
2794 IPs that the connection might have come in on.
2797 $mysockaddr = getsockname(SOCK);
2798 ($port, $myaddr) = sockaddr_in($mysockaddr);
2799 printf "Connect to %s [%s]\n",
2800 scalar gethostbyaddr($myaddr, AF_INET),
2803 =item getsockopt SOCKET,LEVEL,OPTNAME
2806 =for Pod::Functions get socket options on a given socket
2808 Queries the option named OPTNAME associated with SOCKET at a given LEVEL.
2809 Options may exist at multiple protocol levels depending on the socket
2810 type, but at least the uppermost socket level SOL_SOCKET (defined in the
2811 C<Socket> module) will exist. To query options at another level the
2812 protocol number of the appropriate protocol controlling the option
2813 should be supplied. For example, to indicate that an option is to be
2814 interpreted by the TCP protocol, LEVEL should be set to the protocol
2815 number of TCP, which you can get using C<getprotobyname>.
2817 The function returns a packed string representing the requested socket
2818 option, or C<undef> on error, with the reason for the error placed in
2819 C<$!>. Just what is in the packed string depends on LEVEL and OPTNAME;
2820 consult getsockopt(2) for details. A common case is that the option is an
2821 integer, in which case the result is a packed integer, which you can decode
2822 using C<unpack> with the C<i> (or C<I>) format.
2824 Here's an example to test whether Nagle's algorithm is enabled on a socket:
2826 use Socket qw(:all);
2828 defined(my $tcp = getprotobyname("tcp"))
2829 or die "Could not determine the protocol number for tcp";
2830 # my $tcp = IPPROTO_TCP; # Alternative
2831 my $packed = getsockopt($socket, $tcp, TCP_NODELAY)
2832 or die "getsockopt TCP_NODELAY: $!";
2833 my $nodelay = unpack("I", $packed);
2834 print "Nagle's algorithm is turned ",
2835 $nodelay ? "off\n" : "on\n";
2837 Portability issues: L<perlport/getsockopt>.
2840 X<glob> X<wildcard> X<filename, expansion> X<expand>
2844 =for Pod::Functions expand filenames using wildcards
2846 In list context, returns a (possibly empty) list of filename expansions on
2847 the value of EXPR such as the standard Unix shell F</bin/csh> would do. In
2848 scalar context, glob iterates through such filename expansions, returning
2849 undef when the list is exhausted. This is the internal function
2850 implementing the C<< <*.c> >> operator, but you can use it directly. If
2851 EXPR is omitted, C<$_> is used. The C<< <*.c> >> operator is discussed in
2852 more detail in L<perlop/"I/O Operators">.
2854 Note that C<glob> splits its arguments on whitespace and treats
2855 each segment as separate pattern. As such, C<glob("*.c *.h")>
2856 matches all files with a F<.c> or F<.h> extension. The expression
2857 C<glob(".* *")> matches all files in the current working directory.
2858 If you want to glob filenames that might contain whitespace, you'll
2859 have to use extra quotes around the spacey filename to protect it.
2860 For example, to glob filenames that have an C<e> followed by a space
2861 followed by an C<f>, use either of:
2863 @spacies = <"*e f*">;
2864 @spacies = glob '"*e f*"';
2865 @spacies = glob q("*e f*");
2867 If you had to get a variable through, you could do this:
2869 @spacies = glob "'*${var}e f*'";
2870 @spacies = glob qq("*${var}e f*");
2872 If non-empty braces are the only wildcard characters used in the
2873 C<glob>, no filenames are matched, but potentially many strings
2874 are returned. For example, this produces nine strings, one for
2875 each pairing of fruits and colors:
2877 @many = glob "{apple,tomato,cherry}={green,yellow,red}";
2879 This operator is implemented using the standard
2880 C<File::Glob> extension. See L<File::Glob> for details, including
2881 C<bsd_glob> which does not treat whitespace as a pattern separator.
2883 Portability issues: L<perlport/glob>.
2886 X<gmtime> X<UTC> X<Greenwich>
2890 =for Pod::Functions convert UNIX time into record or string using Greenwich time
2892 Works just like L</localtime> but the returned values are
2893 localized for the standard Greenwich time zone.
2895 Note: When called in list context, $isdst, the last value
2896 returned by gmtime, is always C<0>. There is no
2897 Daylight Saving Time in GMT.
2899 Portability issues: L<perlport/gmtime>.
2902 X<goto> X<jump> X<jmp>
2908 =for Pod::Functions create spaghetti code
2910 The C<goto-LABEL> form finds the statement labeled with LABEL and
2911 resumes execution there. It can't be used to get out of a block or
2912 subroutine given to C<sort>. It can be used to go almost anywhere
2913 else within the dynamic scope, including out of subroutines, but it's
2914 usually better to use some other construct such as C<last> or C<die>.
2915 The author of Perl has never felt the need to use this form of C<goto>
2916 (in Perl, that is; C is another matter). (The difference is that C
2917 does not offer named loops combined with loop control. Perl does, and
2918 this replaces most structured uses of C<goto> in other languages.)
2920 The C<goto-EXPR> form expects a label name, whose scope will be resolved
2921 dynamically. This allows for computed C<goto>s per FORTRAN, but isn't
2922 necessarily recommended if you're optimizing for maintainability:
2924 goto ("FOO", "BAR", "GLARCH")[$i];
2926 As shown in this example, C<goto-EXPR> is exempt from the "looks like a
2927 function" rule. A pair of parentheses following it does not (necessarily)
2928 delimit its argument. C<goto("NE")."XT"> is equivalent to C<goto NEXT>.
2929 Also, unlike most named operators, this has the same precedence as
2932 Use of C<goto-LABEL> or C<goto-EXPR> to jump into a construct is
2933 deprecated and will issue a warning. Even then, it may not be used to
2934 go into any construct that requires initialization, such as a
2935 subroutine or a C<foreach> loop. It also can't be used to go into a
2936 construct that is optimized away.
2938 The C<goto-&NAME> form is quite different from the other forms of
2939 C<goto>. In fact, it isn't a goto in the normal sense at all, and
2940 doesn't have the stigma associated with other gotos. Instead, it
2941 exits the current subroutine (losing any changes set by local()) and
2942 immediately calls in its place the named subroutine using the current
2943 value of @_. This is used by C<AUTOLOAD> subroutines that wish to
2944 load another subroutine and then pretend that the other subroutine had
2945 been called in the first place (except that any modifications to C<@_>
2946 in the current subroutine are propagated to the other subroutine.)
2947 After the C<goto>, not even C<caller> will be able to tell that this
2948 routine was called first.
2950 NAME needn't be the name of a subroutine; it can be a scalar variable
2951 containing a code reference or a block that evaluates to a code
2954 =item grep BLOCK LIST
2957 =item grep EXPR,LIST
2959 =for Pod::Functions locate elements in a list test true against a given criterion
2961 This is similar in spirit to, but not the same as, grep(1) and its
2962 relatives. In particular, it is not limited to using regular expressions.
2964 Evaluates the BLOCK or EXPR for each element of LIST (locally setting
2965 C<$_> to each element) and returns the list value consisting of those
2966 elements for which the expression evaluated to true. In scalar
2967 context, returns the number of times the expression was true.
2969 @foo = grep(!/^#/, @bar); # weed out comments
2973 @foo = grep {!/^#/} @bar; # weed out comments
2975 Note that C<$_> is an alias to the list value, so it can be used to
2976 modify the elements of the LIST. While this is useful and supported,
2977 it can cause bizarre results if the elements of LIST are not variables.
2978 Similarly, grep returns aliases into the original list, much as a for
2979 loop's index variable aliases the list elements. That is, modifying an
2980 element of a list returned by grep (for example, in a C<foreach>, C<map>
2981 or another C<grep>) actually modifies the element in the original list.
2982 This is usually something to be avoided when writing clear code.
2984 If C<$_> is lexical in the scope where the C<grep> appears (because it has
2985 been declared with the deprecated C<my $_> construct)
2986 then, in addition to being locally aliased to
2987 the list elements, C<$_> keeps being lexical inside the block; i.e., it
2988 can't be seen from the outside, avoiding any potential side-effects.
2990 See also L</map> for a list composed of the results of the BLOCK or EXPR.
2993 X<hex> X<hexadecimal>
2997 =for Pod::Functions convert a string to a hexadecimal number
2999 Interprets EXPR as a hex string and returns the corresponding value.
3000 (To convert strings that might start with either C<0>, C<0x>, or C<0b>, see
3001 L</oct>.) If EXPR is omitted, uses C<$_>.
3003 print hex '0xAf'; # prints '175'
3004 print hex 'aF'; # same
3006 Hex strings may only represent integers. Strings that would cause
3007 integer overflow trigger a warning. Leading whitespace is not stripped,
3008 unlike oct(). To present something as hex, look into L</printf>,
3009 L</sprintf>, and L</unpack>.
3014 =for Pod::Functions patch a module's namespace into your own
3016 There is no builtin C<import> function. It is just an ordinary
3017 method (subroutine) defined (or inherited) by modules that wish to export
3018 names to another module. The C<use> function calls the C<import> method
3019 for the package used. See also L</use>, L<perlmod>, and L<Exporter>.
3021 =item index STR,SUBSTR,POSITION
3022 X<index> X<indexOf> X<InStr>
3024 =item index STR,SUBSTR
3026 =for Pod::Functions find a substring within a string
3028 The index function searches for one string within another, but without
3029 the wildcard-like behavior of a full regular-expression pattern match.
3030 It returns the position of the first occurrence of SUBSTR in STR at
3031 or after POSITION. If POSITION is omitted, starts searching from the
3032 beginning of the string. POSITION before the beginning of the string
3033 or after its end is treated as if it were the beginning or the end,
3034 respectively. POSITION and the return value are based at zero.
3035 If the substring is not found, C<index> returns -1.
3038 X<int> X<integer> X<truncate> X<trunc> X<floor>
3042 =for Pod::Functions get the integer portion of a number
3044 Returns the integer portion of EXPR. If EXPR is omitted, uses C<$_>.
3045 You should not use this function for rounding: one because it truncates
3046 towards C<0>, and two because machine representations of floating-point
3047 numbers can sometimes produce counterintuitive results. For example,
3048 C<int(-6.725/0.025)> produces -268 rather than the correct -269; that's
3049 because it's really more like -268.99999999999994315658 instead. Usually,
3050 the C<sprintf>, C<printf>, or the C<POSIX::floor> and C<POSIX::ceil>
3051 functions will serve you better than will int().
3053 =item ioctl FILEHANDLE,FUNCTION,SCALAR
3056 =for Pod::Functions system-dependent device control system call
3058 Implements the ioctl(2) function. You'll probably first have to say
3060 require "sys/ioctl.ph"; # probably in
3061 # $Config{archlib}/sys/ioctl.ph
3063 to get the correct function definitions. If F<sys/ioctl.ph> doesn't
3064 exist or doesn't have the correct definitions you'll have to roll your
3065 own, based on your C header files such as F<< <sys/ioctl.h> >>.
3066 (There is a Perl script called B<h2ph> that comes with the Perl kit that
3067 may help you in this, but it's nontrivial.) SCALAR will be read and/or
3068 written depending on the FUNCTION; a C pointer to the string value of SCALAR
3069 will be passed as the third argument of the actual C<ioctl> call. (If SCALAR
3070 has no string value but does have a numeric value, that value will be
3071 passed rather than a pointer to the string value. To guarantee this to be
3072 true, add a C<0> to the scalar before using it.) The C<pack> and C<unpack>
3073 functions may be needed to manipulate the values of structures used by
3076 The return value of C<ioctl> (and C<fcntl>) is as follows:
3078 if OS returns: then Perl returns:
3080 0 string "0 but true"
3081 anything else that number
3083 Thus Perl returns true on success and false on failure, yet you can
3084 still easily determine the actual value returned by the operating
3087 $retval = ioctl(...) || -1;
3088 printf "System returned %d\n", $retval;
3090 The special string C<"0 but true"> is exempt from B<-w> complaints
3091 about improper numeric conversions.
3093 Portability issues: L<perlport/ioctl>.
3095 =item join EXPR,LIST
3098 =for Pod::Functions join a list into a string using a separator
3100 Joins the separate strings of LIST into a single string with fields
3101 separated by the value of EXPR, and returns that new string. Example:
3103 $rec = join(':', $login,$passwd,$uid,$gid,$gcos,$home,$shell);
3105 Beware that unlike C<split>, C<join> doesn't take a pattern as its
3106 first argument. Compare L</split>.
3115 =for Pod::Functions retrieve list of indices from a hash
3117 Called in list context, returns a list consisting of all the keys of the
3118 named hash, or in Perl 5.12 or later only, the indices of an array. Perl
3119 releases prior to 5.12 will produce a syntax error if you try to use an
3120 array argument. In scalar context, returns the number of keys or indices.
3122 Hash entries are returned in an apparently random order. The actual random
3123 order is specific to a given hash; the exact same series of operations
3124 on two hashes may result in a different order for each hash. Any insertion
3125 into the hash may change the order, as will any deletion, with the exception
3126 that the most recent key returned by C<each> or C<keys> may be deleted
3127 without changing the order. So long as a given hash is unmodified you may
3128 rely on C<keys>, C<values> and C<each> to repeatedly return the same order
3129 as each other. See L<perlsec/"Algorithmic Complexity Attacks"> for
3130 details on why hash order is randomized. Aside from the guarantees
3131 provided here the exact details of Perl's hash algorithm and the hash
3132 traversal order are subject to change in any release of Perl.
3134 As a side effect, calling keys() resets the internal iterator of the HASH or
3135 ARRAY (see L</each>). In particular, calling keys() in void context resets
3136 the iterator with no other overhead.
3138 Here is yet another way to print your environment:
3141 @values = values %ENV;
3143 print pop(@keys), '=', pop(@values), "\n";
3146 or how about sorted by key:
3148 foreach $key (sort(keys %ENV)) {
3149 print $key, '=', $ENV{$key}, "\n";
3152 The returned values are copies of the original keys in the hash, so
3153 modifying them will not affect the original hash. Compare L</values>.
3155 To sort a hash by value, you'll need to use a C<sort> function.
3156 Here's a descending numeric sort of a hash by its values:
3158 foreach $key (sort { $hash{$b} <=> $hash{$a} } keys %hash) {
3159 printf "%4d %s\n", $hash{$key}, $key;
3162 Used as an lvalue, C<keys> allows you to increase the number of hash buckets
3163 allocated for the given hash. This can gain you a measure of efficiency if
3164 you know the hash is going to get big. (This is similar to pre-extending
3165 an array by assigning a larger number to $#array.) If you say
3169 then C<%hash> will have at least 200 buckets allocated for it--256 of them,
3170 in fact, since it rounds up to the next power of two. These
3171 buckets will be retained even if you do C<%hash = ()>, use C<undef
3172 %hash> if you want to free the storage while C<%hash> is still in scope.
3173 You can't shrink the number of buckets allocated for the hash using
3174 C<keys> in this way (but you needn't worry about doing this by accident,
3175 as trying has no effect). C<keys @array> in an lvalue context is a syntax
3178 Starting with Perl 5.14, C<keys> can take a scalar EXPR, which must contain
3179 a reference to an unblessed hash or array. The argument will be
3180 dereferenced automatically. This aspect of C<keys> is considered highly
3181 experimental. The exact behaviour may change in a future version of Perl.
3183 for (keys $hashref) { ... }
3184 for (keys $obj->get_arrayref) { ... }
3186 To avoid confusing would-be users of your code who are running earlier
3187 versions of Perl with mysterious syntax errors, put this sort of thing at
3188 the top of your file to signal that your code will work I<only> on Perls of
3191 use 5.012; # so keys/values/each work on arrays
3192 use 5.014; # so keys/values/each work on scalars (experimental)
3194 See also C<each>, C<values>, and C<sort>.
3196 =item kill SIGNAL, LIST
3201 =for Pod::Functions send a signal to a process or process group
3203 Sends a signal to a list of processes. Returns the number of
3204 processes successfully signaled (which is not necessarily the
3205 same as the number actually killed).
3207 $cnt = kill 'HUP', $child1, $child2;
3208 kill 'KILL', @goners;
3210 SIGNAL may be either a signal name (a string) or a signal number. A signal
3211 name may start with a C<SIG> prefix, thus C<FOO> and C<SIGFOO> refer to the
3212 same signal. The string form of SIGNAL is recommended for portability because
3213 the same signal may have different numbers in different operating systems.
3215 A list of signal names supported by the current platform can be found in
3216 C<$Config{sig_name}>, which is provided by the C<Config> module. See L<Config>
3219 A negative signal name is the same as a negative signal number, killing process
3220 groups instead of processes. For example, C<kill '-KILL', $pgrp> and
3221 C<kill -9, $pgrp> will send C<SIGKILL> to the entire process group specified. That
3222 means you usually want to use positive not negative signals.
3224 If SIGNAL is either the number 0 or the string C<ZERO> (or C<SIGZZERO>),
3225 no signal is sent to
3226 the process, but C<kill> checks whether it's I<possible> to send a signal to it
3227 (that means, to be brief, that the process is owned by the same user, or we are
3228 the super-user). This is useful to check that a child process is still
3229 alive (even if only as a zombie) and hasn't changed its UID. See
3230 L<perlport> for notes on the portability of this construct.
3232 The behavior of kill when a I<PROCESS> number is zero or negative depends on
3233 the operating system. For example, on POSIX-conforming systems, zero will
3234 signal the current process group, -1 will signal all processes, and any
3235 other negative PROCESS number will act as a negative signal number and
3236 kill the entire process group specified.
3238 If both the SIGNAL and the PROCESS are negative, the results are undefined.
3239 A warning may be produced in a future version.
3241 See L<perlipc/"Signals"> for more details.
3243 On some platforms such as Windows where the fork() system call is not available.
3244 Perl can be built to emulate fork() at the interpreter level.
3245 This emulation has limitations related to kill that have to be considered,
3246 for code running on Windows and in code intended to be portable.
3248 See L<perlfork> for more details.
3250 If there is no I<LIST> of processes, no signal is sent, and the return
3251 value is 0. This form is sometimes used, however, because it causes
3252 tainting checks to be run. But see
3253 L<perlsec/Laundering and Detecting Tainted Data>.
3255 Portability issues: L<perlport/kill>.
3264 =for Pod::Functions exit a block prematurely
3266 The C<last> command is like the C<break> statement in C (as used in
3267 loops); it immediately exits the loop in question. If the LABEL is
3268 omitted, the command refers to the innermost enclosing
3269 loop. The C<last EXPR> form, available starting in Perl
3270 5.18.0, allows a label name to be computed at run time,
3271 and is otherwise identical to C<last LABEL>. The
3272 C<continue> block, if any, is not executed:
3274 LINE: while (<STDIN>) {
3275 last LINE if /^$/; # exit when done with header
3279 C<last> cannot be used to exit a block that returns a value such as
3280 C<eval {}>, C<sub {}>, or C<do {}>, and should not be used to exit
3281 a grep() or map() operation.
3283 Note that a block by itself is semantically identical to a loop
3284 that executes once. Thus C<last> can be used to effect an early
3285 exit out of such a block.
3287 See also L</continue> for an illustration of how C<last>, C<next>, and
3290 Unlike most named operators, this has the same precedence as assignment.
3291 It is also exempt from the looks-like-a-function rule, so
3292 C<last ("foo")."bar"> will cause "bar" to be part of the argument to
3300 =for Pod::Functions return lower-case version of a string
3302 Returns a lowercased version of EXPR. This is the internal function
3303 implementing the C<\L> escape in double-quoted strings.
3305 If EXPR is omitted, uses C<$_>.
3307 What gets returned depends on several factors:
3311 =item If C<use bytes> is in effect:
3313 The results follow ASCII semantics. Only characters C<A-Z> change, to C<a-z>
3316 =item Otherwise, if C<use locale> (but not C<use locale ':not_characters'>) is in effect:
3318 Respects current LC_CTYPE locale for code points < 256; and uses Unicode
3319 semantics for the remaining code points (this last can only happen if
3320 the UTF8 flag is also set). See L<perllocale>.
3322 A deficiency in this is that case changes that cross the 255/256
3323 boundary are not well-defined. For example, the lower case of LATIN CAPITAL
3324 LETTER SHARP S (U+1E9E) in Unicode semantics is U+00DF (on ASCII
3325 platforms). But under C<use locale>, the lower case of U+1E9E is
3326 itself, because 0xDF may not be LATIN SMALL LETTER SHARP S in the
3327 current locale, and Perl has no way of knowing if that character even
3328 exists in the locale, much less what code point it is. Perl returns
3329 the input character unchanged, for all instances (and there aren't
3330 many) where the 255/256 boundary would otherwise be crossed.
3332 =item Otherwise, If EXPR has the UTF8 flag set:
3334 Unicode semantics are used for the case change.
3336 =item Otherwise, if C<use feature 'unicode_strings'> or C<use locale ':not_characters'> is in effect:
3338 Unicode semantics are used for the case change.
3342 ASCII semantics are used for the case change. The lowercase of any character
3343 outside the ASCII range is the character itself.
3348 X<lcfirst> X<lowercase>
3352 =for Pod::Functions return a string with just the next letter in lower case
3354 Returns the value of EXPR with the first character lowercased. This
3355 is the internal function implementing the C<\l> escape in
3356 double-quoted strings.
3358 If EXPR is omitted, uses C<$_>.
3360 This function behaves the same way under various pragmata, such as in a locale,
3368 =for Pod::Functions return the number of characters in a string
3370 Returns the length in I<characters> of the value of EXPR. If EXPR is
3371 omitted, returns the length of C<$_>. If EXPR is undefined, returns
3374 This function cannot be used on an entire array or hash to find out how
3375 many elements these have. For that, use C<scalar @array> and C<scalar keys
3376 %hash>, respectively.
3378 Like all Perl character operations, length() normally deals in logical
3379 characters, not physical bytes. For how many bytes a string encoded as
3380 UTF-8 would take up, use C<length(Encode::encode_utf8(EXPR))> (you'll have
3381 to C<use Encode> first). See L<Encode> and L<perlunicode>.
3386 =for Pod::Functions the current source line number
3388 A special token that compiles to the current line number.
3390 =item link OLDFILE,NEWFILE
3393 =for Pod::Functions create a hard link in the filesystem
3395 Creates a new filename linked to the old filename. Returns true for
3396 success, false otherwise.
3398 Portability issues: L<perlport/link>.
3400 =item listen SOCKET,QUEUESIZE
3403 =for Pod::Functions register your socket as a server
3405 Does the same thing that the listen(2) system call does. Returns true if
3406 it succeeded, false otherwise. See the example in
3407 L<perlipc/"Sockets: Client/Server Communication">.
3412 =for Pod::Functions create a temporary value for a global variable (dynamic scoping)
3414 You really probably want to be using C<my> instead, because C<local> isn't
3415 what most people think of as "local". See
3416 L<perlsub/"Private Variables via my()"> for details.
3418 A local modifies the listed variables to be local to the enclosing
3419 block, file, or eval. If more than one value is listed, the list must
3420 be placed in parentheses. See L<perlsub/"Temporary Values via local()">
3421 for details, including issues with tied arrays and hashes.
3423 The C<delete local EXPR> construct can also be used to localize the deletion
3424 of array/hash elements to the current block.
3425 See L<perlsub/"Localized deletion of elements of composite types">.
3427 =item localtime EXPR
3428 X<localtime> X<ctime>
3432 =for Pod::Functions convert UNIX time into record or string using local time
3434 Converts a time as returned by the time function to a 9-element list
3435 with the time analyzed for the local time zone. Typically used as
3439 ($sec,$min,$hour,$mday,$mon,$year,$wday,$yday,$isdst) =
3442 All list elements are numeric and come straight out of the C `struct
3443 tm'. C<$sec>, C<$min>, and C<$hour> are the seconds, minutes, and hours
3444 of the specified time.
3446 C<$mday> is the day of the month and C<$mon> the month in
3447 the range C<0..11>, with 0 indicating January and 11 indicating December.
3448 This makes it easy to get a month name from a list:
3450 my @abbr = qw(Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec);
3451 print "$abbr[$mon] $mday";
3452 # $mon=9, $mday=18 gives "Oct 18"
3454 C<$year> contains the number of years since 1900. To get a 4-digit
3459 To get the last two digits of the year (e.g., "01" in 2001) do:
3461 $year = sprintf("%02d", $year % 100);
3463 C<$wday> is the day of the week, with 0 indicating Sunday and 3 indicating
3464 Wednesday. C<$yday> is the day of the year, in the range C<0..364>
3465 (or C<0..365> in leap years.)
3467 C<$isdst> is true if the specified time occurs during Daylight Saving
3468 Time, false otherwise.
3470 If EXPR is omitted, C<localtime()> uses the current time (as returned
3473 In scalar context, C<localtime()> returns the ctime(3) value:
3475 $now_string = localtime; # e.g., "Thu Oct 13 04:54:34 1994"
3477 The format of this scalar value is B<not> locale-dependent
3478 but built into Perl. For GMT instead of local
3479 time use the L</gmtime> builtin. See also the
3480 C<Time::Local> module (for converting seconds, minutes, hours, and such back to
3481 the integer value returned by time()), and the L<POSIX> module's strftime(3)
3482 and mktime(3) functions.
3484 To get somewhat similar but locale-dependent date strings, set up your
3485 locale environment variables appropriately (please see L<perllocale>) and
3488 use POSIX qw(strftime);
3489 $now_string = strftime "%a %b %e %H:%M:%S %Y", localtime;
3490 # or for GMT formatted appropriately for your locale:
3491 $now_string = strftime "%a %b %e %H:%M:%S %Y", gmtime;
3493 Note that the C<%a> and C<%b>, the short forms of the day of the week
3494 and the month of the year, may not necessarily be three characters wide.
3496 The L<Time::gmtime> and L<Time::localtime> modules provide a convenient,
3497 by-name access mechanism to the gmtime() and localtime() functions,
3500 For a comprehensive date and time representation look at the
3501 L<DateTime> module on CPAN.
3503 Portability issues: L<perlport/localtime>.
3508 =for Pod::Functions +5.005 get a thread lock on a variable, subroutine, or method
3510 This function places an advisory lock on a shared variable or referenced
3511 object contained in I<THING> until the lock goes out of scope.
3513 The value returned is the scalar itself, if the argument is a scalar, or a
3514 reference, if the argument is a hash, array or subroutine.
3516 lock() is a "weak keyword" : this means that if you've defined a function
3517 by this name (before any calls to it), that function will be called
3518 instead. If you are not under C<use threads::shared> this does nothing.
3519 See L<threads::shared>.
3522 X<log> X<logarithm> X<e> X<ln> X<base>
3526 =for Pod::Functions retrieve the natural logarithm for a number
3528 Returns the natural logarithm (base I<e>) of EXPR. If EXPR is omitted,
3529 returns the log of C<$_>. To get the
3530 log of another base, use basic algebra:
3531 The base-N log of a number is equal to the natural log of that number
3532 divided by the natural log of N. For example:
3536 return log($n)/log(10);
3539 See also L</exp> for the inverse operation.
3541 =item lstat FILEHANDLE
3546 =item lstat DIRHANDLE
3550 =for Pod::Functions stat a symbolic link
3552 Does the same thing as the C<stat> function (including setting the
3553 special C<_> filehandle) but stats a symbolic link instead of the file
3554 the symbolic link points to. If symbolic links are unimplemented on
3555 your system, a normal C<stat> is done. For much more detailed
3556 information, please see the documentation for C<stat>.
3558 If EXPR is omitted, stats C<$_>.
3560 Portability issues: L<perlport/lstat>.
3564 =for Pod::Functions match a string with a regular expression pattern
3566 The match operator. See L<perlop/"Regexp Quote-Like Operators">.
3568 =item map BLOCK LIST
3573 =for Pod::Functions apply a change to a list to get back a new list with the changes
3575 Evaluates the BLOCK or EXPR for each element of LIST (locally setting
3576 C<$_> to each element) and returns the list value composed of the
3577 results of each such evaluation. In scalar context, returns the
3578 total number of elements so generated. Evaluates BLOCK or EXPR in
3579 list context, so each element of LIST may produce zero, one, or
3580 more elements in the returned value.
3582 @chars = map(chr, @numbers);
3584 translates a list of numbers to the corresponding characters.
3586 my @squares = map { $_ * $_ } @numbers;
3588 translates a list of numbers to their squared values.
3590 my @squares = map { $_ > 5 ? ($_ * $_) : () } @numbers;
3592 shows that number of returned elements can differ from the number of
3593 input elements. To omit an element, return an empty list ().
3594 This could also be achieved by writing
3596 my @squares = map { $_ * $_ } grep { $_ > 5 } @numbers;
3598 which makes the intention more clear.
3600 Map always returns a list, which can be
3601 assigned to a hash such that the elements
3602 become key/value pairs. See L<perldata> for more details.
3604 %hash = map { get_a_key_for($_) => $_ } @array;
3606 is just a funny way to write
3610 $hash{get_a_key_for($_)} = $_;
3613 Note that C<$_> is an alias to the list value, so it can be used to
3614 modify the elements of the LIST. While this is useful and supported,
3615 it can cause bizarre results if the elements of LIST are not variables.
3616 Using a regular C<foreach> loop for this purpose would be clearer in
3617 most cases. See also L</grep> for an array composed of those items of
3618 the original list for which the BLOCK or EXPR evaluates to true.
3620 If C<$_> is lexical in the scope where the C<map> appears (because it has
3621 been declared with the deprecated C<my $_> construct),
3622 then, in addition to being locally aliased to
3623 the list elements, C<$_> keeps being lexical inside the block; that is, it
3624 can't be seen from the outside, avoiding any potential side-effects.
3626 C<{> starts both hash references and blocks, so C<map { ...> could be either
3627 the start of map BLOCK LIST or map EXPR, LIST. Because Perl doesn't look
3628 ahead for the closing C<}> it has to take a guess at which it's dealing with
3629 based on what it finds just after the
3630 C<{>. Usually it gets it right, but if it
3631 doesn't it won't realize something is wrong until it gets to the C<}> and
3632 encounters the missing (or unexpected) comma. The syntax error will be
3633 reported close to the C<}>, but you'll need to change something near the C<{>
3634 such as using a unary C<+> to give Perl some help:
3636 %hash = map { "\L$_" => 1 } @array # perl guesses EXPR. wrong
3637 %hash = map { +"\L$_" => 1 } @array # perl guesses BLOCK. right
3638 %hash = map { ("\L$_" => 1) } @array # this also works
3639 %hash = map { lc($_) => 1 } @array # as does this.
3640 %hash = map +( lc($_) => 1 ), @array # this is EXPR and works!
3642 %hash = map ( lc($_), 1 ), @array # evaluates to (1, @array)
3644 or to force an anon hash constructor use C<+{>:
3646 @hashes = map +{ lc($_) => 1 }, @array # EXPR, so needs
3649 to get a list of anonymous hashes each with only one entry apiece.
3651 =item mkdir FILENAME,MASK
3652 X<mkdir> X<md> X<directory, create>
3654 =item mkdir FILENAME
3658 =for Pod::Functions create a directory
3660 Creates the directory specified by FILENAME, with permissions
3661 specified by MASK (as modified by C<umask>). If it succeeds it
3662 returns true; otherwise it returns false and sets C<$!> (errno).
3663 MASK defaults to 0777 if omitted, and FILENAME defaults
3664 to C<$_> if omitted.
3666 In general, it is better to create directories with a permissive MASK
3667 and let the user modify that with their C<umask> than it is to supply
3668 a restrictive MASK and give the user no way to be more permissive.
3669 The exceptions to this rule are when the file or directory should be
3670 kept private (mail files, for instance). The perlfunc(1) entry on
3671 C<umask> discusses the choice of MASK in more detail.
3673 Note that according to the POSIX 1003.1-1996 the FILENAME may have any
3674 number of trailing slashes. Some operating and filesystems do not get
3675 this right, so Perl automatically removes all trailing slashes to keep
3678 To recursively create a directory structure, look at
3679 the C<mkpath> function of the L<File::Path> module.
3681 =item msgctl ID,CMD,ARG
3684 =for Pod::Functions SysV IPC message control operations
3686 Calls the System V IPC function msgctl(2). You'll probably have to say
3690 first to get the correct constant definitions. If CMD is C<IPC_STAT>,
3691 then ARG must be a variable that will hold the returned C<msqid_ds>
3692 structure. Returns like C<ioctl>: the undefined value for error,
3693 C<"0 but true"> for zero, or the actual return value otherwise. See also
3694 L<perlipc/"SysV IPC"> and the documentation for C<IPC::SysV> and
3697 Portability issues: L<perlport/msgctl>.
3699 =item msgget KEY,FLAGS
3702 =for Pod::Functions get SysV IPC message queue
3704 Calls the System V IPC function msgget(2). Returns the message queue
3705 id, or C<undef> on error. See also
3706 L<perlipc/"SysV IPC"> and the documentation for C<IPC::SysV> and
3709 Portability issues: L<perlport/msgget>.
3711 =item msgrcv ID,VAR,SIZE,TYPE,FLAGS
3714 =for Pod::Functions receive a SysV IPC message from a message queue
3716 Calls the System V IPC function msgrcv to receive a message from
3717 message queue ID into variable VAR with a maximum message size of
3718 SIZE. Note that when a message is received, the message type as a
3719 native long integer will be the first thing in VAR, followed by the
3720 actual message. This packing may be opened with C<unpack("l! a*")>.
3721 Taints the variable. Returns true if successful, false
3722 on error. See also L<perlipc/"SysV IPC"> and the documentation for
3723 C<IPC::SysV> and C<IPC::SysV::Msg>.
3725 Portability issues: L<perlport/msgrcv>.
3727 =item msgsnd ID,MSG,FLAGS
3730 =for Pod::Functions send a SysV IPC message to a message queue
3732 Calls the System V IPC function msgsnd to send the message MSG to the
3733 message queue ID. MSG must begin with the native long integer message
3734 type, be followed by the length of the actual message, and then finally
3735 the message itself. This kind of packing can be achieved with
3736 C<pack("l! a*", $type, $message)>. Returns true if successful,
3737 false on error. See also the C<IPC::SysV>
3738 and C<IPC::SysV::Msg> documentation.
3740 Portability issues: L<perlport/msgsnd>.
3747 =item my EXPR : ATTRS
3749 =item my TYPE EXPR : ATTRS
3751 =for Pod::Functions declare and assign a local variable (lexical scoping)
3753 A C<my> declares the listed variables to be local (lexically) to the
3754 enclosing block, file, or C<eval>. If more than one value is listed,
3755 the list must be placed in parentheses.
3757 The exact semantics and interface of TYPE and ATTRS are still
3758 evolving. TYPE is currently bound to the use of the C<fields> pragma,
3759 and attributes are handled using the C<attributes> pragma, or starting
3760 from Perl 5.8.0 also via the C<Attribute::Handlers> module. See
3761 L<perlsub/"Private Variables via my()"> for details, and L<fields>,
3762 L<attributes>, and L<Attribute::Handlers>.
3771 =for Pod::Functions iterate a block prematurely
3773 The C<next> command is like the C<continue> statement in C; it starts
3774 the next iteration of the loop:
3776 LINE: while (<STDIN>) {
3777 next LINE if /^#/; # discard comments
3781 Note that if there were a C<continue> block on the above, it would get
3782 executed even on discarded lines. If LABEL is omitted, the command
3783 refers to the innermost enclosing loop. The C<next EXPR> form, available
3784 as of Perl 5.18.0, allows a label name to be computed at run time, being
3785 otherwise identical to C<next LABEL>.
3787 C<next> cannot be used to exit a block which returns a value such as
3788 C<eval {}>, C<sub {}>, or C<do {}>, and should not be used to exit
3789 a grep() or map() operation.
3791 Note that a block by itself is semantically identical to a loop
3792 that executes once. Thus C<next> will exit such a block early.
3794 See also L</continue> for an illustration of how C<last>, C<next>, and
3797 Unlike most named operators, this has the same precedence as assignment.
3798 It is also exempt from the looks-like-a-function rule, so
3799 C<next ("foo")."bar"> will cause "bar" to be part of the argument to
3802 =item no MODULE VERSION LIST
3806 =item no MODULE VERSION
3808 =item no MODULE LIST
3814 =for Pod::Functions unimport some module symbols or semantics at compile time
3816 See the C<use> function, of which C<no> is the opposite.
3819 X<oct> X<octal> X<hex> X<hexadecimal> X<binary> X<bin>
3823 =for Pod::Functions convert a string to an octal number
3825 Interprets EXPR as an octal string and returns the corresponding
3826 value. (If EXPR happens to start off with C<0x>, interprets it as a
3827 hex string. If EXPR starts off with C<0b>, it is interpreted as a
3828 binary string. Leading whitespace is ignored in all three cases.)
3829 The following will handle decimal, binary, octal, and hex in standard
3832 $val = oct($val) if $val =~ /^0/;
3834 If EXPR is omitted, uses C<$_>. To go the other way (produce a number
3835 in octal), use sprintf() or printf():
3837 $dec_perms = (stat("filename"))[2] & 07777;
3838 $oct_perm_str = sprintf "%o", $perms;
3840 The oct() function is commonly used when a string such as C<644> needs
3841 to be converted into a file mode, for example. Although Perl
3842 automatically converts strings into numbers as needed, this automatic
3843 conversion assumes base 10.
3845 Leading white space is ignored without warning, as too are any trailing
3846 non-digits, such as a decimal point (C<oct> only handles non-negative
3847 integers, not negative integers or floating point).
3849 =item open FILEHANDLE,EXPR
3850 X<open> X<pipe> X<file, open> X<fopen>
3852 =item open FILEHANDLE,MODE,EXPR
3854 =item open FILEHANDLE,MODE,EXPR,LIST
3856 =item open FILEHANDLE,MODE,REFERENCE
3858 =item open FILEHANDLE
3860 =for Pod::Functions open a file, pipe, or descriptor
3862 Opens the file whose filename is given by EXPR, and associates it with
3865 Simple examples to open a file for reading:
3867 open(my $fh, "<", "input.txt")
3868 or die "cannot open < input.txt: $!";
3872 open(my $fh, ">", "output.txt")
3873 or die "cannot open > output.txt: $!";
3875 (The following is a comprehensive reference to open(): for a gentler
3876 introduction you may consider L<perlopentut>.)
3878 If FILEHANDLE is an undefined scalar variable (or array or hash element), a
3879 new filehandle is autovivified, meaning that the variable is assigned a
3880 reference to a newly allocated anonymous filehandle. Otherwise if
3881 FILEHANDLE is an expression, its value is the real filehandle. (This is
3882 considered a symbolic reference, so C<use strict "refs"> should I<not> be
3885 If EXPR is omitted, the global (package) scalar variable of the same
3886 name as the FILEHANDLE contains the filename. (Note that lexical
3887 variables--those declared with C<my> or C<state>--will not work for this
3888 purpose; so if you're using C<my> or C<state>, specify EXPR in your
3891 If three (or more) arguments are specified, the open mode (including
3892 optional encoding) in the second argument are distinct from the filename in
3893 the third. If MODE is C<< < >> or nothing, the file is opened for input.
3894 If MODE is C<< > >>, the file is opened for output, with existing files
3895 first being truncated ("clobbered") and nonexisting files newly created.
3896 If MODE is C<<< >> >>>, the file is opened for appending, again being
3897 created if necessary.
3899 You can put a C<+> in front of the C<< > >> or C<< < >> to
3900 indicate that you want both read and write access to the file; thus
3901 C<< +< >> is almost always preferred for read/write updates--the
3902 C<< +> >> mode would clobber the file first. You can't usually use
3903 either read-write mode for updating textfiles, since they have
3904 variable-length records. See the B<-i> switch in L<perlrun> for a
3905 better approach. The file is created with permissions of C<0666>
3906 modified by the process's C<umask> value.
3908 These various prefixes correspond to the fopen(3) modes of C<r>,
3909 C<r+>, C<w>, C<w+>, C<a>, and C<a+>.
3911 In the one- and two-argument forms of the call, the mode and filename
3912 should be concatenated (in that order), preferably separated by white
3913 space. You can--but shouldn't--omit the mode in these forms when that mode
3914 is C<< < >>. It is always safe to use the two-argument form of C<open> if
3915 the filename argument is a known literal.
3917 For three or more arguments if MODE is C<|->, the filename is
3918 interpreted as a command to which output is to be piped, and if MODE
3919 is C<-|>, the filename is interpreted as a command that pipes
3920 output to us. In the two-argument (and one-argument) form, one should
3921 replace dash (C<->) with the command.
3922 See L<perlipc/"Using open() for IPC"> for more examples of this.
3923 (You are not allowed to C<open> to a command that pipes both in I<and>
3924 out, but see L<IPC::Open2>, L<IPC::Open3>, and
3925 L<perlipc/"Bidirectional Communication with Another Process"> for
3928 In the form of pipe opens taking three or more arguments, if LIST is specified
3929 (extra arguments after the command name) then LIST becomes arguments
3930 to the command invoked if the platform supports it. The meaning of
3931 C<open> with more than three arguments for non-pipe modes is not yet
3932 defined, but experimental "layers" may give extra LIST arguments
3935 In the two-argument (and one-argument) form, opening C<< <- >>
3936 or C<-> opens STDIN and opening C<< >- >> opens STDOUT.
3938 You may (and usually should) use the three-argument form of open to specify
3939 I/O layers (sometimes referred to as "disciplines") to apply to the handle
3940 that affect how the input and output are processed (see L<open> and
3941 L<PerlIO> for more details). For example:
3943 open(my $fh, "<:encoding(UTF-8)", "filename")
3944 || die "can't open UTF-8 encoded filename: $!";
3946 opens the UTF8-encoded file containing Unicode characters;
3947 see L<perluniintro>. Note that if layers are specified in the
3948 three-argument form, then default layers stored in ${^OPEN} (see L<perlvar>;
3949 usually set by the B<open> pragma or the switch B<-CioD>) are ignored.
3950 Those layers will also be ignored if you specifying a colon with no name
3951 following it. In that case the default layer for the operating system
3952 (:raw on Unix, :crlf on Windows) is used.
3954 Open returns nonzero on success, the undefined value otherwise. If
3955 the C<open> involved a pipe, the return value happens to be the pid of
3958 If you're running Perl on a system that distinguishes between text
3959 files and binary files, then you should check out L</binmode> for tips
3960 for dealing with this. The key distinction between systems that need
3961 C<binmode> and those that don't is their text file formats. Systems
3962 like Unix, Mac OS, and Plan 9, that end lines with a single
3963 character and encode that character in C as C<"\n"> do not
3964 need C<binmode>. The rest need it.
3966 When opening a file, it's seldom a good idea to continue
3967 if the request failed, so C<open> is frequently used with
3968 C<die>. Even if C<die> won't do what you want (say, in a CGI script,
3969 where you want to format a suitable error message (but there are
3970 modules that can help with that problem)) always check
3971 the return value from opening a file.
3973 As a special case the three-argument form with a read/write mode and the third
3974 argument being C<undef>:
3976 open(my $tmp, "+>", undef) or die ...
3978 opens a filehandle to an anonymous temporary file. Also using C<< +< >>
3979 works for symmetry, but you really should consider writing something
3980 to the temporary file first. You will need to seek() to do the
3983 Perl is built using PerlIO by default; Unless you've
3984 changed this (such as building Perl with C<Configure -Uuseperlio>), you can
3985 open filehandles directly to Perl scalars via:
3987 open($fh, ">", \$variable) || ..
3989 To (re)open C<STDOUT> or C<STDERR> as an in-memory file, close it first:
3992 open(STDOUT, ">", \$variable)
3993 or die "Can't open STDOUT: $!";
3998 open(ARTICLE) or die "Can't find article $ARTICLE: $!\n";
3999 while (<ARTICLE>) {...
4001 open(LOG, ">>/usr/spool/news/twitlog"); # (log is reserved)
4002 # if the open fails, output is discarded
4004 open(my $dbase, "+<", "dbase.mine") # open for update
4005 or die "Can't open 'dbase.mine' for update: $!";
4007 open(my $dbase, "+<dbase.mine") # ditto
4008 or die "Can't open 'dbase.mine' for update: $!";
4010 open(ARTICLE, "-|", "caesar <$article") # decrypt article
4011 or die "Can't start caesar: $!";
4013 open(ARTICLE, "caesar <$article |") # ditto
4014 or die "Can't start caesar: $!";
4016 open(EXTRACT, "|sort >Tmp$$") # $$ is our process id
4017 or die "Can't start sort: $!";
4020 open(MEMORY, ">", \$var)
4021 or die "Can't open memory file: $!";
4022 print MEMORY "foo!\n"; # output will appear in $var
4024 # process argument list of files along with any includes
4026 foreach $file (@ARGV) {
4027 process($file, "fh00");
4031 my($filename, $input) = @_;
4032 $input++; # this is a string increment
4033 unless (open($input, "<", $filename)) {
4034 print STDERR "Can't open $filename: $!\n";
4039 while (<$input>) { # note use of indirection
4040 if (/^#include "(.*)"/) {
4041 process($1, $input);
4048 See L<perliol> for detailed info on PerlIO.
4050 You may also, in the Bourne shell tradition, specify an EXPR beginning
4051 with C<< >& >>, in which case the rest of the string is interpreted
4052 as the name of a filehandle (or file descriptor, if numeric) to be
4053 duped (as C<dup(2)>) and opened. You may use C<&> after C<< > >>,
4054 C<<< >> >>>, C<< < >>, C<< +> >>, C<<< +>> >>>, and C<< +< >>.
4055 The mode you specify should match the mode of the original filehandle.
4056 (Duping a filehandle does not take into account any existing contents
4057 of IO buffers.) If you use the three-argument
4058 form, then you can pass either a
4059 number, the name of a filehandle, or the normal "reference to a glob".
4061 Here is a script that saves, redirects, and restores C<STDOUT> and
4062 C<STDERR> using various methods:
4065 open(my $oldout, ">&STDOUT") or die "Can't dup STDOUT: $!";
4066 open(OLDERR, ">&", \*STDERR) or die "Can't dup STDERR: $!";
4068 open(STDOUT, '>', "foo.out") or die "Can't redirect STDOUT: $!";
4069 open(STDERR, ">&STDOUT") or die "Can't dup STDOUT: $!";
4071 select STDERR; $| = 1; # make unbuffered
4072 select STDOUT; $| = 1; # make unbuffered
4074 print STDOUT "stdout 1\n"; # this works for
4075 print STDERR "stderr 1\n"; # subprocesses too
4077 open(STDOUT, ">&", $oldout) or die "Can't dup \$oldout: $!";
4078 open(STDERR, ">&OLDERR") or die "Can't dup OLDERR: $!";
4080 print STDOUT "stdout 2\n";
4081 print STDERR "stderr 2\n";
4083 If you specify C<< '<&=X' >>, where C<X> is a file descriptor number
4084 or a filehandle, then Perl will do an equivalent of C's C<fdopen> of
4085 that file descriptor (and not call C<dup(2)>); this is more
4086 parsimonious of file descriptors. For example:
4088 # open for input, reusing the fileno of $fd
4089 open(FILEHANDLE, "<&=$fd")
4093 open(FILEHANDLE, "<&=", $fd)
4097 # open for append, using the fileno of OLDFH
4098 open(FH, ">>&=", OLDFH)
4102 open(FH, ">>&=OLDFH")
4104 Being parsimonious on filehandles is also useful (besides being
4105 parsimonious) for example when something is dependent on file
4106 descriptors, like for example locking using flock(). If you do just
4107 C<< open(A, ">>&B") >>, the filehandle A will not have the same file
4108 descriptor as B, and therefore flock(A) will not flock(B) nor vice
4109 versa. But with C<< open(A, ">>&=B") >>, the filehandles will share
4110 the same underlying system file descriptor.
4112 Note that under Perls older than 5.8.0, Perl uses the standard C library's'
4113 fdopen() to implement the C<=> functionality. On many Unix systems,
4114 fdopen() fails when file descriptors exceed a certain value, typically 255.
4115 For Perls 5.8.0 and later, PerlIO is (most often) the default.
4117 You can see whether your Perl was built with PerlIO by running C<perl -V>
4118 and looking for the C<useperlio=> line. If C<useperlio> is C<define>, you
4119 have PerlIO; otherwise you don't.
4121 If you open a pipe on the command C<-> (that is, specify either C<|-> or C<-|>
4122 with the one- or two-argument forms of C<open>),
4123 an implicit C<fork> is done, so C<open> returns twice: in the parent
4124 process it returns the pid
4125 of the child process, and in the child process it returns (a defined) C<0>.
4126 Use C<defined($pid)> or C<//> to determine whether the open was successful.
4128 For example, use either
4130 $child_pid = open(FROM_KID, "-|") // die "can't fork: $!";
4134 $child_pid = open(TO_KID, "|-") // die "can't fork: $!";
4140 # either write TO_KID or else read FROM_KID
4142 waitpid $child_pid, 0;
4144 # am the child; use STDIN/STDOUT normally
4149 The filehandle behaves normally for the parent, but I/O to that
4150 filehandle is piped from/to the STDOUT/STDIN of the child process.
4151 In the child process, the filehandle isn't opened--I/O happens from/to
4152 the new STDOUT/STDIN. Typically this is used like the normal
4153 piped open when you want to exercise more control over just how the
4154 pipe command gets executed, such as when running setuid and
4155 you don't want to have to scan shell commands for metacharacters.
4157 The following blocks are more or less equivalent:
4159 open(FOO, "|tr '[a-z]' '[A-Z]'");
4160 open(FOO, "|-", "tr '[a-z]' '[A-Z]'");
4161 open(FOO, "|-") || exec 'tr', '[a-z]', '[A-Z]';
4162 open(FOO, "|-", "tr", '[a-z]', '[A-Z]');
4164 open(FOO, "cat -n '$file'|");
4165 open(FOO, "-|", "cat -n '$file'");
4166 open(FOO, "-|") || exec "cat", "-n", $file;
4167 open(FOO, "-|", "cat", "-n", $file);
4169 The last two examples in each block show the pipe as "list form", which is
4170 not yet supported on all platforms. A good rule of thumb is that if
4171 your platform has a real C<fork()> (in other words, if your platform is
4172 Unix, including Linux and MacOS X), you can use the list form. You would
4173 want to use the list form of the pipe so you can pass literal arguments
4174 to the command without risk of the shell interpreting any shell metacharacters
4175 in them. However, this also bars you from opening pipes to commands
4176 that intentionally contain shell metacharacters, such as:
4178 open(FOO, "|cat -n | expand -4 | lpr")
4179 // die "Can't open pipeline to lpr: $!";
4181 See L<perlipc/"Safe Pipe Opens"> for more examples of this.
4183 Perl will attempt to flush all files opened for
4184 output before any operation that may do a fork, but this may not be
4185 supported on some platforms (see L<perlport>). To be safe, you may need
4186 to set C<$|> ($AUTOFLUSH in English) or call the C<autoflush()> method
4187 of C<IO::Handle> on any open handles.
4189 On systems that support a close-on-exec flag on files, the flag will
4190 be set for the newly opened file descriptor as determined by the value
4191 of C<$^F>. See L<perlvar/$^F>.
4193 Closing any piped filehandle causes the parent process to wait for the
4194 child to finish, then returns the status value in C<$?> and
4195 C<${^CHILD_ERROR_NATIVE}>.
4197 The filename passed to the one- and two-argument forms of open() will
4198 have leading and trailing whitespace deleted and normal
4199 redirection characters honored. This property, known as "magic open",
4200 can often be used to good effect. A user could specify a filename of
4201 F<"rsh cat file |">, or you could change certain filenames as needed:
4203 $filename =~ s/(.*\.gz)\s*$/gzip -dc < $1|/;
4204 open(FH, $filename) or die "Can't open $filename: $!";
4206 Use the three-argument form to open a file with arbitrary weird characters in it,
4208 open(FOO, "<", $file)
4209 || die "can't open < $file: $!";
4211 otherwise it's necessary to protect any leading and trailing whitespace:
4213 $file =~ s#^(\s)#./$1#;
4214 open(FOO, "< $file\0")
4215 || die "open failed: $!";
4217 (this may not work on some bizarre filesystems). One should
4218 conscientiously choose between the I<magic> and I<three-argument> form
4221 open(IN, $ARGV[0]) || die "can't open $ARGV[0]: $!";
4223 will allow the user to specify an argument of the form C<"rsh cat file |">,
4224 but will not work on a filename that happens to have a trailing space, while
4226 open(IN, "<", $ARGV[0])
4227 || die "can't open < $ARGV[0]: $!";
4229 will have exactly the opposite restrictions.
4231 If you want a "real" C C<open> (see L<open(2)> on your system), then you
4232 should use the C<sysopen> function, which involves no such magic (but may
4233 use subtly different filemodes than Perl open(), which is mapped to C
4234 fopen()). This is another way to protect your filenames from
4235 interpretation. For example:
4238 sysopen(HANDLE, $path, O_RDWR|O_CREAT|O_EXCL)
4239 or die "sysopen $path: $!";
4240 $oldfh = select(HANDLE); $| = 1; select($oldfh);
4241 print HANDLE "stuff $$\n";
4243 print "File contains: ", <HANDLE>;
4245 Using the constructor from the C<IO::Handle> package (or one of its
4246 subclasses, such as C<IO::File> or C<IO::Socket>), you can generate anonymous
4247 filehandles that have the scope of the variables used to hold them, then
4248 automatically (but silently) close once their reference counts become
4249 zero, typically at scope exit:
4253 sub read_myfile_munged {
4255 # or just leave it undef to autoviv
4256 my $handle = IO::File->new;
4257 open($handle, "<", "myfile") or die "myfile: $!";
4259 or return (); # Automatically closed here.
4260 mung($first) or die "mung failed"; # Or here.
4261 return (first, <$handle>) if $ALL; # Or here.
4262 return $first; # Or here.
4265 B<WARNING:> The previous example has a bug because the automatic
4266 close that happens when the refcount on C<handle> reaches zero does not
4267 properly detect and report failures. I<Always> close the handle
4268 yourself and inspect the return value.
4271 || warn "close failed: $!";
4273 See L</seek> for some details about mixing reading and writing.
4275 Portability issues: L<perlport/open>.
4277 =item opendir DIRHANDLE,EXPR
4280 =for Pod::Functions open a directory
4282 Opens a directory named EXPR for processing by C<readdir>, C<telldir>,
4283 C<seekdir>, C<rewinddir>, and C<closedir>. Returns true if successful.
4284 DIRHANDLE may be an expression whose value can be used as an indirect
4285 dirhandle, usually the real dirhandle name. If DIRHANDLE is an undefined
4286 scalar variable (or array or hash element), the variable is assigned a
4287 reference to a new anonymous dirhandle; that is, it's autovivified.
4288 DIRHANDLEs have their own namespace separate from FILEHANDLEs.
4290 See the example at C<readdir>.
4297 =for Pod::Functions find a character's numeric representation
4299 Returns the numeric value of the first character of EXPR.
4300 If EXPR is an empty string, returns 0. If EXPR is omitted, uses C<$_>.
4301 (Note I<character>, not byte.)
4303 For the reverse, see L</chr>.
4304 See L<perlunicode> for more about Unicode.
4311 =item our EXPR : ATTRS
4313 =item our TYPE EXPR : ATTRS
4315 =for Pod::Functions +5.6.0 declare and assign a package variable (lexical scoping)
4317 C<our> makes a lexical alias to a package variable of the same name in the current
4318 package for use within the current lexical scope.
4320 C<our> has the same scoping rules as C<my> or C<state>, but C<our> only
4321 declares an alias, whereas C<my> or C<state> both declare a variable name and
4322 allocate storage for that name within the current scope.
4324 This means that when C<use strict 'vars'> is in effect, C<our> lets you use
4325 a package variable without qualifying it with the package name, but only within
4326 the lexical scope of the C<our> declaration. In this way, C<our> differs from
4327 C<use vars>, which allows use of an unqualified name I<only> within the
4328 affected package, but across scopes.
4330 If more than one value is listed, the list must be placed
4336 An C<our> declaration declares an alias for a package variable that will be visible
4337 across its entire lexical scope, even across package boundaries. The
4338 package in which the variable is entered is determined at the point
4339 of the declaration, not at the point of use. This means the following
4343 our $bar; # declares $Foo::bar for rest of lexical scope
4347 print $bar; # prints 20, as it refers to $Foo::bar
4349 Multiple C<our> declarations with the same name in the same lexical
4350 scope are allowed if they are in different packages. If they happen
4351 to be in the same package, Perl will emit warnings if you have asked
4352 for them, just like multiple C<my> declarations. Unlike a second
4353 C<my> declaration, which will bind the name to a fresh variable, a
4354 second C<our> declaration in the same package, in the same scope, is
4359 our $bar; # declares $Foo::bar for rest of lexical scope
4363 our $bar = 30; # declares $Bar::bar for rest of lexical scope
4364 print $bar; # prints 30
4366 our $bar; # emits warning but has no other effect
4367 print $bar; # still prints 30
4369 An C<our> declaration may also have a list of attributes associated
4372 The exact semantics and interface of TYPE and ATTRS are still
4373 evolving. TYPE is currently bound to the use of the C<fields> pragma,
4374 and attributes are handled using the C<attributes> pragma, or, starting
4375 from Perl 5.8.0, also via the C<Attribute::Handlers> module. See
4376 L<perlsub/"Private Variables via my()"> for details, and L<fields>,
4377 L<attributes>, and L<Attribute::Handlers>.
4379 =item pack TEMPLATE,LIST
4382 =for Pod::Functions convert a list into a binary representation
4384 Takes a LIST of values and converts it into a string using the rules
4385 given by the TEMPLATE. The resulting string is the concatenation of
4386 the converted values. Typically, each converted value looks
4387 like its machine-level representation. For example, on 32-bit machines
4388 an integer may be represented by a sequence of 4 bytes, which will in
4389 Perl be presented as a string that's 4 characters long.
4391 See L<perlpacktut> for an introduction to this function.
4393 The TEMPLATE is a sequence of characters that give the order and type
4394 of values, as follows:
4396 a A string with arbitrary binary data, will be null padded.
4397 A A text (ASCII) string, will be space padded.
4398 Z A null-terminated (ASCIZ) string, will be null padded.
4400 b A bit string (ascending bit order inside each byte,
4402 B A bit string (descending bit order inside each byte).
4403 h A hex string (low nybble first).
4404 H A hex string (high nybble first).
4406 c A signed char (8-bit) value.
4407 C An unsigned char (octet) value.
4408 W An unsigned char value (can be greater than 255).
4410 s A signed short (16-bit) value.
4411 S An unsigned short value.
4413 l A signed long (32-bit) value.
4414 L An unsigned long value.
4416 q A signed quad (64-bit) value.
4417 Q An unsigned quad value.
4418 (Quads are available only if your system supports 64-bit
4419 integer values _and_ if Perl has been compiled to support
4420 those. Raises an exception otherwise.)
4422 i A signed integer value.
4423 I A unsigned integer value.
4424 (This 'integer' is _at_least_ 32 bits wide. Its exact
4425 size depends on what a local C compiler calls 'int'.)
4427 n An unsigned short (16-bit) in "network" (big-endian) order.
4428 N An unsigned long (32-bit) in "network" (big-endian) order.
4429 v An unsigned short (16-bit) in "VAX" (little-endian) order.
4430 V An unsigned long (32-bit) in "VAX" (little-endian) order.
4432 j A Perl internal signed integer value (IV).
4433 J A Perl internal unsigned integer value (UV).
4435 f A single-precision float in native format.
4436 d A double-precision float in native format.
4438 F A Perl internal floating-point value (NV) in native format
4439 D A float of long-double precision in native format.
4440 (Long doubles are available only if your system supports
4441 long double values _and_ if Perl has been compiled to
4442 support those. Raises an exception otherwise.)
4444 p A pointer to a null-terminated string.
4445 P A pointer to a structure (fixed-length string).
4447 u A uuencoded string.
4448 U A Unicode character number. Encodes to a character in char-
4449 acter mode and UTF-8 (or UTF-EBCDIC in EBCDIC platforms) in
4452 w A BER compressed integer (not an ASN.1 BER, see perlpacktut
4453 for details). Its bytes represent an unsigned integer in
4454 base 128, most significant digit first, with as few digits
4455 as possible. Bit eight (the high bit) is set on each byte
4458 x A null byte (a.k.a ASCII NUL, "\000", chr(0))
4460 @ Null-fill or truncate to absolute position, counted from the
4461 start of the innermost ()-group.
4462 . Null-fill or truncate to absolute position specified by
4464 ( Start of a ()-group.
4466 One or more modifiers below may optionally follow certain letters in the
4467 TEMPLATE (the second column lists letters for which the modifier is valid):
4469 ! sSlLiI Forces native (short, long, int) sizes instead
4470 of fixed (16-/32-bit) sizes.
4472 xX Make x and X act as alignment commands.
4474 nNvV Treat integers as signed instead of unsigned.
4476 @. Specify position as byte offset in the internal
4477 representation of the packed string. Efficient
4480 > sSiIlLqQ Force big-endian byte-order on the type.
4481 jJfFdDpP (The "big end" touches the construct.)
4483 < sSiIlLqQ Force little-endian byte-order on the type.
4484 jJfFdDpP (The "little end" touches the construct.)
4486 The C<< > >> and C<< < >> modifiers can also be used on C<()> groups
4487 to force a particular byte-order on all components in that group,
4488 including all its subgroups.
4492 Larry recalls that the hex and bit string formats (H, h, B, b) were added to
4493 pack for processing data from NASA's Magellan probe. Magellan was in an
4494 elliptical orbit, using the antenna for the radar mapping when close to
4495 Venus and for communicating data back to Earth for the rest of the orbit.
4496 There were two transmission units, but one of these failed, and then the
4497 other developed a fault whereby it would randomly flip the sense of all the
4498 bits. It was easy to automatically detect complete records with the correct
4499 sense, and complete records with all the bits flipped. However, this didn't
4500 recover the records where the sense flipped midway. A colleague of Larry's
4501 was able to pretty much eyeball where the records flipped, so they wrote an
4502 editor named kybble (a pun on the dog food Kibbles 'n Bits) to enable him to
4503 manually correct the records and recover the data. For this purpose pack
4504 gained the hex and bit string format specifiers.
4506 git shows that they were added to perl 3.0 in patch #44 (Jan 1991, commit
4507 27e2fb84680b9cc1), but the patch description makes no mention of their
4508 addition, let alone the story behind them.
4512 The following rules apply:
4518 Each letter may optionally be followed by a number indicating the repeat
4519 count. A numeric repeat count may optionally be enclosed in brackets, as
4520 in C<pack("C[80]", @arr)>. The repeat count gobbles that many values from
4521 the LIST when used with all format types other than C<a>, C<A>, C<Z>, C<b>,
4522 C<B>, C<h>, C<H>, C<@>, C<.>, C<x>, C<X>, and C<P>, where it means
4523 something else, described below. Supplying a C<*> for the repeat count
4524 instead of a number means to use however many items are left, except for:
4530 C<@>, C<x>, and C<X>, where it is equivalent to C<0>.
4534 <.>, where it means relative to the start of the string.
4538 C<u>, where it is equivalent to 1 (or 45, which here is equivalent).
4542 One can replace a numeric repeat count with a template letter enclosed in
4543 brackets to use the packed byte length of the bracketed template for the
4546 For example, the template C<x[L]> skips as many bytes as in a packed long,
4547 and the template C<"$t X[$t] $t"> unpacks twice whatever $t (when
4548 variable-expanded) unpacks. If the template in brackets contains alignment
4549 commands (such as C<x![d]>), its packed length is calculated as if the
4550 start of the template had the maximal possible alignment.
4552 When used with C<Z>, a C<*> as the repeat count is guaranteed to add a
4553 trailing null byte, so the resulting string is always one byte longer than
4554 the byte length of the item itself.
4556 When used with C<@>, the repeat count represents an offset from the start
4557 of the innermost C<()> group.
4559 When used with C<.>, the repeat count determines the starting position to
4560 calculate the value offset as follows:
4566 If the repeat count is C<0>, it's relative to the current position.
4570 If the repeat count is C<*>, the offset is relative to the start of the
4575 And if it's an integer I<n>, the offset is relative to the start of the
4576 I<n>th innermost C<( )> group, or to the start of the string if I<n> is
4577 bigger then the group level.
4581 The repeat count for C<u> is interpreted as the maximal number of bytes
4582 to encode per line of output, with 0, 1 and 2 replaced by 45. The repeat
4583 count should not be more than 65.
4587 The C<a>, C<A>, and C<Z> types gobble just one value, but pack it as a
4588 string of length count, padding with nulls or spaces as needed. When
4589 unpacking, C<A> strips trailing whitespace and nulls, C<Z> strips everything
4590 after the first null, and C<a> returns data with no stripping at all.
4592 If the value to pack is too long, the result is truncated. If it's too
4593 long and an explicit count is provided, C<Z> packs only C<$count-1> bytes,
4594 followed by a null byte. Thus C<Z> always packs a trailing null, except
4595 when the count is 0.
4599 Likewise, the C<b> and C<B> formats pack a string that's that many bits long.
4600 Each such format generates 1 bit of the result. These are typically followed
4601 by a repeat count like C<B8> or C<B64>.
4603 Each result bit is based on the least-significant bit of the corresponding
4604 input character, i.e., on C<ord($char)%2>. In particular, characters C<"0">
4605 and C<"1"> generate bits 0 and 1, as do characters C<"\000"> and C<"\001">.
4607 Starting from the beginning of the input string, each 8-tuple
4608 of characters is converted to 1 character of output. With format C<b>,
4609 the first character of the 8-tuple determines the least-significant bit of a
4610 character; with format C<B>, it determines the most-significant bit of
4613 If the length of the input string is not evenly divisible by 8, the
4614 remainder is packed as if the input string were padded by null characters
4615 at the end. Similarly during unpacking, "extra" bits are ignored.
4617 If the input string is longer than needed, remaining characters are ignored.
4619 A C<*> for the repeat count uses all characters of the input field.
4620 On unpacking, bits are converted to a string of C<0>s and C<1>s.
4624 The C<h> and C<H> formats pack a string that many nybbles (4-bit groups,
4625 representable as hexadecimal digits, C<"0".."9"> C<"a".."f">) long.
4627 For each such format, pack() generates 4 bits of result.
4628 With non-alphabetical characters, the result is based on the 4 least-significant
4629 bits of the input character, i.e., on C<ord($char)%16>. In particular,
4630 characters C<"0"> and C<"1"> generate nybbles 0 and 1, as do bytes
4631 C<"\000"> and C<"\001">. For characters C<"a".."f"> and C<"A".."F">, the result
4632 is compatible with the usual hexadecimal digits, so that C<"a"> and
4633 C<"A"> both generate the nybble C<0xA==10>. Use only these specific hex
4634 characters with this format.
4636 Starting from the beginning of the template to pack(), each pair
4637 of characters is converted to 1 character of output. With format C<h>, the
4638 first character of the pair determines the least-significant nybble of the
4639 output character; with format C<H>, it determines the most-significant
4642 If the length of the input string is not even, it behaves as if padded by
4643 a null character at the end. Similarly, "extra" nybbles are ignored during
4646 If the input string is longer than needed, extra characters are ignored.
4648 A C<*> for the repeat count uses all characters of the input field. For
4649 unpack(), nybbles are converted to a string of hexadecimal digits.
4653 The C<p> format packs a pointer to a null-terminated string. You are
4654 responsible for ensuring that the string is not a temporary value, as that
4655 could potentially get deallocated before you got around to using the packed
4656 result. The C<P> format packs a pointer to a structure of the size indicated
4657 by the length. A null pointer is created if the corresponding value for
4658 C<p> or C<P> is C<undef>; similarly with unpack(), where a null pointer
4659 unpacks into C<undef>.
4661 If your system has a strange pointer size--meaning a pointer is neither as
4662 big as an int nor as big as a long--it may not be possible to pack or
4663 unpack pointers in big- or little-endian byte order. Attempting to do
4664 so raises an exception.
4668 The C</> template character allows packing and unpacking of a sequence of
4669 items where the packed structure contains a packed item count followed by
4670 the packed items themselves. This is useful when the structure you're
4671 unpacking has encoded the sizes or repeat counts for some of its fields
4672 within the structure itself as separate fields.
4674 For C<pack>, you write I<length-item>C</>I<sequence-item>, and the
4675 I<length-item> describes how the length value is packed. Formats likely
4676 to be of most use are integer-packing ones like C<n> for Java strings,
4677 C<w> for ASN.1 or SNMP, and C<N> for Sun XDR.
4679 For C<pack>, I<sequence-item> may have a repeat count, in which case
4680 the minimum of that and the number of available items is used as the argument
4681 for I<length-item>. If it has no repeat count or uses a '*', the number
4682 of available items is used.
4684 For C<unpack>, an internal stack of integer arguments unpacked so far is
4685 used. You write C</>I<sequence-item> and the repeat count is obtained by
4686 popping off the last element from the stack. The I<sequence-item> must not
4687 have a repeat count.
4689 If I<sequence-item> refers to a string type (C<"A">, C<"a">, or C<"Z">),
4690 the I<length-item> is the string length, not the number of strings. With
4691 an explicit repeat count for pack, the packed string is adjusted to that
4692 length. For example:
4694 This code: gives this result: