There is nothing special about STDOUT, it's just another file handle. seek() does work on STDOUT if STDOUT is seekable, e.g. a plain file. But (pseudo) TTYs usually aren't seekable, at least not for writing, so seek() doesn't work when STDOUT is not redirected.
#!/usr/bin/perl -w use strict; seek(STDOUT,14,0); print "Now I'm there\n"; seek(STDOUT,0,0); print "Now I'm here\n";
Run without redirection (perl foo.pl), and you get:
Now I'm there Now I'm here
The seek()s simply fail, and because the code does not check for errors, seek() seems to be a dummy for STDOUT.
Run again, redirecting to a file (perl foo.pl > foo.txt; cat foo.txt), and the file contains:
Now I'm here Now I'm there
Now let's play safe and add some error checking:
#!/usr/bin/perl -w use strict; seek(STDOUT,14,0) or warn $!; print "Now I'm there\n"; seek(STDOUT,0,0) or warn $!; print "Now I'm here\n";
Run again, without redirection:
Illegal seek at foo.pl line 4. Now I'm there Illegal seek at foo.pl line 6. Now I'm here
So, seek() is not a dummy, it simply fails, because the TTY does not allow seek() for write access.
Redirecting to a file, as above, works without any warnings:
Now I'm here Now I'm there
Alexander
In reply to Re^2: seek() command on STDOUT
by afoken
in thread seek() command on STDOUT
by ybnormal
| For: | Use: | ||
| & | & | ||
| < | < | ||
| > | > | ||
| [ | [ | ||
| ] | ] |