You really, really, really should use strict, especially if you are new to Perl. It will save you from asking embarrassing questions.

That is to say, being new to Perl, you might still have to ask:

"What does Global symbol "$line" requires explicit package name mean?"

But that's a much better question than "why didn't that line of code I stuck in my program work?"

#!/usr/bin/perl -w use strict; { open(NPBXNUM1, ">npbxnum1"); open(MYINPUTFILE, "npbxnum"); while (<MYINPUTFILE>) { chomp; $line .= '_' x (4 - length $line); } close(MYINPUTFILE); close(NPBXNUM1); system "mv npbxnum1 npbxnum"; } exit; __END__ C:\Steve\Dev\PerlMonks\P-2013-09-17@2038-Use-Strict>usestrict.pl Global symbol "$line" requires explicit package name at C:\Steve\Dev\P +erlMonks\P-2013-09-17@2038-Use-Strict\usestrict.pl line 11. Global symbol "$line" requires explicit package name at C:\Steve\Dev\P +erlMonks\P-2013-09-17@2038-Use-Strict\usestrict.pl line 11. Execution of C:\Steve\Dev\PerlMonks\P-2013-09-17@2038-Use-Strict\usest +rict.pl aborted due to compilation errors.

In reply to Re^3: How to have perl check line length by marinersk
in thread How to have perl check line length by ddrew78

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