$path=s/\//\/;
That would normally be written as:
$path=~s/\//\\/g;
I'm not entirely sure what your rendition would do - though it's highly likely that it won't do what you want. OTOH, it's also likely that you don't need to do that substitution - so simply removing that line of code might fix your problem.
open(FH,"$path/$file")
Always check that the open() succeeded - and print out the contents of $! if it failed:
open(FH,"$path/$file") or die $!;
(Note that you've just specified a
/ as the path separator - yet earlier on you deemed it necessary to use
\ as the path separator.)
Update: Fixed typo that a certain pedant picked up. (Thanks
almut :-)
Cheers,
Rob
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