open (DAT, "@ARGV");

"@ARGV" is short for join( $", @ARGV ).    If you just want the first argument from the command line then use $ARGV[0] instead.    You should really be using the three argument form of open and you should always verify that the file opened correctly, so:

open mt $DAT, '<', $ARGV[ 0 ] or die "Cannot open '$ARGV[0]' $ +!";

while ($line = <DAT>){ do (@word = split (/\W/, $line)); foreach $word (keys %charCount){ do (@letter = split (/\w+/, $word); $letter = (keys %charcount)} if ($charCount){$char}){ $charCount{$char}++; }else { $charCount{$char}=1; }

Since you say that you only want letters you need something like this:

my %charCount; while ( my $line = <$DAT> ) { my @letters = $line =~ /[a-zA-Z]/g; foreach my $char ( @letters ) { $charCount{ $char }++; } } foreach my $char ( keys %charCount ) { print "$char => $charCount{$char}\n"; }

close(DAT, "@ARGV");

close only accepts one argument, the filehandle that was previously opened.

close $DAT;


In reply to Re: Hash to count characters by jwkrahn
in thread Hash to count characters by amittleider

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