my $file = shift @ARGV; if (open my $FH , $file) { my $start_pattern_found = 0; while (my $line = <$FH>) {
It's a side note, but I can't understand why you do this. You just want to show the use of a flag, which is a good point. Since the example may very well stay minimal, why not using good old <> instead?
In any case, using the range operator in scalar context may be much easier than maintaining a flag yourself:
while (<>) { chomp; next if 1 .. /^internal name/; print "Found pattern at line $.\n" if /^need this/; }
In reply to Re^2: seek and process from there on
by blazar
in thread seek and process from there on
by Anonymous Monk
| For: | Use: | ||
| & | & | ||
| < | < | ||
| > | > | ||
| [ | [ | ||
| ] | ] |