though i am not sure if this the right approach, but you can do something like the following or get some ideas, who knows:
use strict;
use warnings;
use diagnostics;
use File::Slurp;
my @files = read_dir($ARGV[0]); #read files in dir into an array
my $dir = $ARGV[0];
my $string = $ARGV[1];
my $file;
my $line;
foreach my $element (@files) {
open $file, '<', "$dir/$element"; #open each file
while (<$file>) {
if ( $_ =~ $string ) { #match your string
print "found $string in $element\n";
}
}
close $file;
}
this will read each file into an array, then it will open each of those files and search for a match.
EDIT: in your test script in your original post, you may want to look into Cwd. i think that would allow you to get the current working directory AFTER you leave the dir that the script is in. and would only be slightly trivial to implement without a major code change
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