By default, on all platforms, chomp only ever removes "\n" (linefeed) never "\r" (carriage return).
My understanding is a bit different. I agree that chomp removes "\n" by default as $/ defaults to "\n". However, "\n" is not a linefeed, but a "logical newline". On MacPerl, for instance, "\n" means "\015".
The rest of what you said is true. On Windows "\n" is equal to "\012" just as it is on Unix/Linux but standard IO does the conversion from CRLF to LF if the file is opened in text mode. I didn't mean to imply otherwise; I was just taking a guess at how the situation arose for the OP. Thanks for making it clear though.
-sauoq
"My two cents aren't worth a dime.";
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