except that it breaks DOS machines.
DOS/Windows coders can get their revenge by using
open FH "C:\temp";
That would be revenge indeed, creating a program which will run nowhere, not even on windows. On seeing this code
perl turns it into:
open FH 'C:{TAB}emp';
Which is unlikely to be the file you wanted to open. Always, always, always, use '/' as a directory seperator, it works all over the place. In fact, your first versuion:
open (FH, ">/temp/tempfile");
print FH $temporary_data;
will work perfectly well, assuming 'C:\temp\tempfile' exists, but you didn't check the sucess of the open call so you'll never know.
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