Using a one-liner and backticks,
perl -e '{ .... }' `ls -l`, @ARGV will be loaded with the output from the
ls command.
However, if you wanted to process each line in turn, you could use a one-liner ... ls -l | perl -ne '{ .... }' to read each line of the ls command, in turn, into $_ or alternatively ...
ls -l | perl -ane '{ .... }' will read each line in turn and split it (the line) on whitespace, into @F.
HTH ,
A user level that continues to overstate my experience :-))
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