IO::Lines(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation IO::Lines(3)NAME
IO::Lines - IO:: interface for reading/writing an array of lines
SYNOPSIS
use IO::Lines;
### See IO::ScalarArray for details
DESCRIPTION
This class implements objects which behave just like FileHandle (or IO::Handle) objects, except that you may use them to write to (or read
from) an array of lines. They can be tiehandle'd as well.
This is a subclass of IO::ScalarArray in which the underlying array has its data stored in a line-oriented-format: that is, every element
ends in a "
", with the possible exception of the final element. This makes "getline()" much more efficient; if you plan to do line-
oriented reading/printing, you want this class.
The "print()" method will enforce this rule, so you can print arbitrary data to the line-array: it will break the data at newlines
appropriately.
See IO::ScalarArray for full usage and warnings.
VERSION
$Id: Lines.pm,v 1.3 2005/02/10 21:21:53 dfs Exp $
AUTHORS
Primary Maintainer
David F. Skoll (dfs@roaringpenguin.com).
Principal author
Eryq (eryq@zeegee.com). President, ZeeGee Software Inc (http://www.zeegee.com).
Other contributors
Thanks to the following individuals for their invaluable contributions (if I've forgotten or misspelled your name, please email me!):
Morris M. Siegel, for his $/ patch and the new "getlines()".
Doug Wilson, for the IO::Handle inheritance and automatic tie-ing.
perl v5.16.2 2005-02-10 IO::Lines(3)
Check Out this Related Man Page
IO::Lines(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation IO::Lines(3)NAME
IO::Lines - IO:: interface for reading/writing an array of lines
SYNOPSIS
use IO::Lines;
### See IO::ScalarArray for details
DESCRIPTION
This class implements objects which behave just like FileHandle (or IO::Handle) objects, except that you may use them to write to (or read
from) an array of lines. They can be tiehandle'd as well.
This is a subclass of IO::ScalarArray in which the underlying array has its data stored in a line-oriented-format: that is, every element
ends in a "
", with the possible exception of the final element. This makes "getline()" much more efficient; if you plan to do line-
oriented reading/printing, you want this class.
The "print()" method will enforce this rule, so you can print arbitrary data to the line-array: it will break the data at newlines
appropriately.
See IO::ScalarArray for full usage and warnings.
VERSION
$Id: Lines.pm,v 1.3 2005/02/10 21:21:53 dfs Exp $
AUTHORS
Primary Maintainer
David F. Skoll (dfs@roaringpenguin.com).
Principal author
Eryq (eryq@zeegee.com). President, ZeeGee Software Inc (http://www.zeegee.com).
Other contributors
Thanks to the following individuals for their invaluable contributions (if I've forgotten or misspelled your name, please email me!):
Morris M. Siegel, for his $/ patch and the new "getlines()".
Doug Wilson, for the IO::Handle inheritance and automatic tie-ing.
perl v5.18.2 2005-02-10 IO::Lines(3)
Hi all! Im wondering if its possible to remove all lines between two lines. Im working with a document like this:
data1
data2
<Remove>
data3
data4
</Remove>
data5
data6
I need it to end up like this if that possible:
data1
data2
data5
data6
There are multiple instances of... (2 Replies)
I have written a script to read the file line by line.
It is reading and printing the lines.
But it is coming out of loop before reading last line.
So I am not able to print last line.
How do I solve it. (6 Replies)
I need some help with this code below, i doesnt know why it will run twice with my function, but my function only got if else, any other way that can read line and put into array?
while read line; do
read -A array <<<$line
n=${#array}
for ((i=1;i<$n;i++)); do
print... (1 Reply)