Hello jnarayan81,
The monks have already provided you with wisdom, but I am wondering why don't you simply call it through a subroutine. Your script works just fine as soon as you call the subroutine every instance that you want it.
Sample:
#!usr/bin/perl use say; use strict; use warnings; use POSIX q(strftime); my @abc = ("a", "b", "c", "d", "e"); sub fetchTime { return POSIX::strftime('%a, %d %b %Y %T %z', localtime); } for (@abc) {say fetchTime() . "\t$_"; sleep 1;} __END__ $ perl time.pl Wed, 07 Jun 2017 14:08:31 +0200 a Wed, 07 Jun 2017 14:08:32 +0200 b Wed, 07 Jun 2017 14:08:33 +0200 c Wed, 07 Jun 2017 14:08:34 +0200 d Wed, 07 Jun 2017 14:08:35 +0200 e
Hope this helps.
In reply to Re: How to Prepending a timestamp to each line of output from a command
by thanos1983
in thread How to Prepending a timestamp to each line of output from a command
by jnarayan81
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