I understand, however, this is strongly discouraged in the Perl community.

If I've understood your description correctly, there should be no discouragement at all to this. I assume you mean:

my $fileroot = 'foo'; for my $j (0..999) { my $filename = $fileroot . $j; open (my $out, '>', $filename) or die "Cannot open file $filename fo +r writing: $!"; print $out "Hello world!\n"; close $out; }

which seems a perfectly feasible way of achieving 1000 consecutively numbered files in one directory.


In reply to Re^5: Declaring and checking content of variables with consecutive names by hippo
in thread Declaring and checking content of variables with consecutive names by rflesch

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