I didn't mean to say that everytime you do $msg = qx/prog 2>&1/ you always get error message in $msg because the error message totally depends on the program in question. In fact, your example shows that your execution on "someprog" doesn't say anything at all so $msg remains undefined, hence the warning message.

Take a real progam as example,

$ perl -wle '$msg = qx/ls -K 2>&1/; print "error: $?"; print $msg' error: 512 ls: invalid option -- K Try `ls --help' for more information.

If what you meant is that you want to capture the error on the fact that "someprog" command doesn't exist on the system, then you need to capture the error of the shell, not "someprog". Well, depending on your shell,

$ perl -wle '$msg = qx/bash -c ProgramNotExist 2>&1/; print "error: $? +"; print $msg' error: 32512 bash: ProgramNotExist: command not found

Update: Rephrased the "In fact, ...." sentence.


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In reply to Re^3: Using system(): converting error num to human readable message by naikonta
in thread Using system(): converting error num to human readable message by chrism01

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