...that the chomp($temp) would spare me all the nasty newline problems
Depends on what's in $/. $/ by default holds "\n". On Windows, the :crlf PerlIO layer is responsible for translating "\r\n" to "\n". On Unix, this layer is not active (by default), so in case you have input coming from Windows (via cut-n-paste, or whatever), the carriage returns will survive.
In reply to Re^3: Concat strings from parameter file
by almut
in thread Concat strings from parameter file
by jevaly
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