To elaborate slightly, in win32, lines are terminated with \r\n. So when perl, on win32, wants to read a line, it reads until it finds a \r\n pair and translates it to a \n when your script sees it. This is because \n in perl is a masical character that gets translated to whatever the appropiate EOL for that platform is. As the poster above noted, binmode changes this so you read exactly what is written.

In reply to Re: read and EOL weirdness on win32 by BUU
in thread read and EOL weirdness on win32 by tomazos

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