'A' strips whitespace, etc and 'a' doesn't do that

True, but I think BillKSmith's point was that you were using 'C' instead of 'a'. From pack:

a A string with arbitrary binary data, will be null padded. A A text (ASCII) string, will be space padded. Z A null-terminated (ASCIZ) string, will be null padded. C An unsigned char (octet) value.

Here's the difference:

use Data::Dump; my $data = "\x01\x02\x03\x20\x00"; dd unpack 'C*', $data; # prints (1, 2, 3, 32, 0) dd unpack 'a*', $data; # prints "\1\2\3 \0" dd unpack 'A*', $data; # prints "\1\2\3" dd unpack 'Z*', $data; # prints "\1\2\3 " dd unpack 'Z*', $data."X "; # prints "\1\2\3 " dd unpack 'A*', $data."X "; # prints "\1\2\3 \0X" dd unpack 'a*', $data."X "; # prints "\1\2\3 \0X "

So if you want to retain all of the binary data as a string for further unpacking, the 'a' template is the way to go. 'C' will split that string into its individual bytes and return those values.

Update: Added the second 'A*' example.


In reply to Re^3: Problems Getting the Template Correct when Using unpack() by haukex
in thread Problems Getting the Template Correct when Using unpack() by ozboomer

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