If you run the following

use Time::Piece; $time = Time::Piece->strptime('2005-02-24 23:000', "%Y-%m-%d %H:%S");

You get:

garbage at end of string in strptime: 0 at C:/Perl/site/lib/Time/Piece +.pm line 442.

The message is correct, but I don't want it to appear - I'd rather capture it in a variable. I've tried wrapping the code in an eval block, but this doesn't help. Any ideas? I suspect that I should be redirecting either STDOUT or STDERR, but I'm not quite clear how to do this as the examples I've seen redirect to a file, whereas I want to do it to a variable.

20050228 Edit by castaway: Changed title from 'Capturing output of Time::Local'


In reply to Capturing warnings from Time::Piece by Anonymous Monk

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