Instead of the
join, try slurp mode. See
local and
$/ (the latter might be in
perlvar.
Instead of using s///, try tr///. It's more efficient.
Always check the return values of system calls, like open. An array in scalar context gives the number of elements.
my $file;
my $out = 'wordlist.txt';
{
local $/;
$file = <>;
}
$file =~ tr/\n / /s;
$file =~ tr/A-Za-z0-9 //dc;
my %wordlist;
$wordlist{$_}++ foreach (split ' ', $file);
open(LIST, ">$out") or die "Can't open $out: $!";
print LIST join("\n", keys %wordlist);
close LIST;
print (scalar keys %wordlist), " words found. Saved in $out\n";
That's untested, but that's how I'd do it. (Minus any bugs, of course.)
Update: Removed the problematic /d switch from the first tr/// statement, prompted by turnstep's defense of his more comprehensive post.
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