Or you could be lazy and let Find::File do all the recursion and hard work.
use strict;
use File::Find;
#path can be relative to script dir or absolute path
my $MP3ROOT = 'my_music';
#my $MP3ROOT = 'C:\\My Documents\\My Music';
#regex is case insensitive
my $MP3SUFFIX = '.mp3';
my $PREFIX = 'http://www.homepage.org/';
#my $PREFIX = 'C:\\My Documents\\';
@ARGV = @ARGV || ( $MP3ROOT );
find( sub {
if ( ( $File::Find::name =~ /$MP3SUFFIX$/i )
and ( $File::Find::dir !~ /^\./ ) ) # discard .hidden dirs
{
print "<a href=\"$PREFIX$File::Find::name\">$_</a>\n";
}
} , @ARGV );
Someone correct me if I'm wrong but this eliminates the need to keep track of operating system dependent file delims, too, doesn't it?
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