But this sections need to be exactly as they where declared, soo, if some variable exists there can't be parsed.
Soo, this data:
prints:$data = <<DATAFOO; bla bla bla $globalvar DATAFOO print "$data\n" ;
But I need that:bla bla bla
bla bla bla $globalvar
Looking at perldoc I found
## From perldiag: =item Use of bare << to mean <<"" is deprecated (D deprecated) You are now encouraged to use the explicitly quoted form if you wish to use an empty line as the terminator of the here-document. ## From perlop Customary Generic Meaning Interpolates '' q{} Literal no "" qq{} Literal yes `` qx{} Command yes* qw{} Word list no // m{} Pattern match yes* qr{} Pattern yes* s{}{} Substitution yes* tr{}{} Transliteration no (but see below) <<EOF here-doc yes* * unless the delimiter is ''.
Soo, testing some codes I saw that is possible to write that:
And the output is:$data = <<'DATAFOO'; bla bla bla $globalvar DATAFOO print "$data\n" ;
bla bla bla $globalvar
OK, I found what I want. But the use of <<'DELIMITER'; is right/maintained? It works, but I never saw that and is not well documented, or I'm the only one that doesn't know that?
Graciliano M. P.
"Creativity is the expression of the liberty".
In reply to here-document without interpolation (<<DELIMITER;) by gmpassos
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