$filename = <$FN[$k]>; is still bad, though. Using
glob without looping over its results makes no sense.
use strict;
use warnings;
my @FN = qw( a b );
for my $k (0..$#FN) {
my $filename = <$FN[$k]>;
print("$filename\n");
}
a
Use of uninitialized value in concatenation (.) or string at 689777.pl
+ line 6.
If @FN contains glob patterns, then he wants
for (@FN) {
while (defined(my $filename = glob($_))) {
...
}
}
If @FN contains file names (as it seems to), then he wants
for my $filename (@FN) {
...
}
Although it looks like @FN isn't needed at all.
for (0..18, 20..28, 30..38) {
my $filename = sprintf('out-02-%02d.txt', $_);
...
}
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