Since you know the records' individual fields to be delimited by \t,
and to be of a fixed width, you can use either
split or
unpack to grab each field. I chose
split just because it's a more common idiom.
my $infile = "filename.dat";
my @records;
{
open my $fh , "<", $infile or die "Can't open $infile!\n$!";
my @records = map { chomp; [ split /\t/ ] } <$fh>;
}
{
local $" = "\t";
print "@{$_}\n" foreach @records;
}
Each record is held in an anonymous array, referenced by the top level array, @records.
Update: Be sure that if you turn this in as homework you've studied the idioms so that you can explain them. There's a good chance your professor hasn't yet covered everything I (intentionally) used in this example.
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