IO::Scalar - IO:: interface for reading/writing a scalar
use 5.005; use IO::Scalar; $data = "My message:\n";
### Open a handle on a string, and append to it: $SH = new IO::Scalar \$data; $SH->print("Hello"); $SH->print(", world!\nBye now!\n"); print "The string is now: ", $data, "\n";
### Open a handle on a string, read it line-by-line, then close it: $SH = new IO::Scalar \$data; while (defined($_ = $SH->getline)) { print "Got line: $_"; } $SH->close;
### Open a handle on a string, and slurp in all the lines: $SH = new IO::Scalar \$data; print "All lines:\n", $SH->getlines;
### Get the current position (either of two ways): $pos = $SH->getpos; $offset = $SH->tell;
### Set the current position (either of two ways): $SH->setpos($pos); $SH->seek($offset, 0);
### Open an anonymous temporary scalar: $SH = new IO::Scalar; $SH->print("Hi there!"); print "I printed: ", ${$SH->sref}, "\n"; ### get at value
Don't like OO for your I/O? No problem. Thanks to the magic of an invisible tie(), the following now works out of the box, just as it does with IO::Handle:
use 5.005; use IO::Scalar; $data = "My message:\n";
### Open a handle on a string, and append to it: $SH = new IO::Scalar \$data; print $SH "Hello"; print $SH ", world!\nBye now!\n"; print "The string is now: ", $data, "\n";
### Open a handle on a string, read it line-by-line, then close it: $SH = new IO::Scalar \$data; while (<$SH>) { print "Got line: $_"; } close $SH;
### Open a handle on a string, and slurp in all the lines: $SH = new IO::Scalar \$data; print "All lines:\n", <$SH>;
### Get the current position (WARNING: requires 5.6): $offset = tell $SH;
### Set the current position (WARNING: requires 5.6): seek $SH, $offset, 0;
### Open an anonymous temporary scalar: $SH = new IO::Scalar; print $SH "Hi there!"; print "I printed: ", ${$SH->sref}, "\n"; ### get at value
And for you folks with 1.x code out there: the old tie() style still works, though this is unnecessary and deprecated:
use IO::Scalar;
### Writing to a scalar... my $s; tie *OUT, 'IO::Scalar', \$s; print OUT "line 1\nline 2\n", "line 3\n"; print "String is now: $s\n"
### Reading and writing an anonymous scalar... tie *OUT, 'IO::Scalar'; print OUT "line 1\nline 2\n", "line 3\n"; tied(OUT)->seek(0,0); while (<OUT>) { print "Got line: ", $_; }
Stringification works, too!
my $SH = new IO::Scalar \$data; print $SH "Hello, "; print $SH "world!"; print "I printed: $SH\n";
The IO::Scalar class implements objects which behave just like IO::Handle (or FileHandle) objects, except that you may use them to write to (or read from) scalars. These handles are automatically tiehandle'd (though please see ``WARNINGS'' for information relevant to your Perl version).
Basically, this:
my $s; $SH = new IO::Scalar \$s; $SH->print("Hel", "lo, "); ### OO style $SH->print("world!\n"); ### ditto
Or this:
my $s; $SH = tie *OUT, 'IO::Scalar', \$s; print OUT "Hel", "lo, "; ### non-OO style print OUT "world!\n"; ### ditto
Causes $s to be set to:
"Hello, world!\n"
Returns the self object on success, undefined on error.
Warning: this continues to always cause a seek to the end of the string, but if you perform seek()s and tell()s, it is still safer to explicitly seek-to-end before subsequent print()s.
attempt to seek on unopened filehandle
...then you are probably trying to use one of these functions on an IO::Scalar with an old Perl. The remedy is to simply use the OO version; e.g.:
$SH->seek(0,0); ### GOOD: will work on any 5.005 seek($SH,0,0); ### WARNING: will only work on 5.005_57 and beyond
Andy Glew, for contributing "getc()".
Brandon Browning, for suggesting "opened()".
David Richter, for finding and fixing the bug in "PRINTF()".
Eric L. Brine, for his offset-using read() and write() implementations.
Richard Jones, for his patches to massively improve the performance of "getline()" and add "sysread" and "syswrite".
B. K. Oxley (binkley), for stringification and inheritance improvements, and sundry good ideas.
Doug Wilson, for the IO::Handle inheritance and automatic tie-ing.
Note: as of version 2.x, these classes all work like their IO::Handle counterparts, so we have comparable functionality to IO::String.
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