Now pass an arbitrary chunk of Perl code to "perl -e" in a portable manner.
I was only demonstrating that windows supported backticks, not championing the idea of using them and -e as a useful mechanism.
Capture both STDOUT and STDERR from it. Not so trivial.
Capturing stderr also is trivial:
C:\test>perl -E"say `perl -c -Mstrict -we\"my \$l = 365.25*\" 2>&1` "
syntax error at -e line 1, at EOF
-e had compilation errors.
But I would have thought feeding the code to a piped-open and checking the exit code would suffice if all that is required is a yay or nay.
And if you need to actually capture the error messages produced, then this might do the trick: #! perl -slw
use strict;
use Win32::Socketpair qw[ winopen2_5 ];
my( $pid, $sock ) = winopen2_5( 'perl.exe', '-c' );
print $sock <<'EOP';
my $x = 365.25**3;
my $y = qx[ perl -c -e"say 'boo'"; ];
my $z = sub {
print $sock <<;
my $x = 365.25**3;
my $y = qx[ perl -c -e"say 'boo'"; ];
my $z = sub {
print $sock <<;
my $x = 365.25**3;
my $y = qx[ perl -c -e"say 'boo'"; ];
my $z = sub {
1;
};
};
};
EOP
shutdown $sock, 1;
print while <$sock>;
close $sock;
( $pid, $sock ) = winopen2_5( 'perl.exe', q[-E"say 'hello'; warn; die;
+"] );
shutdown $sock, 1;
print while <$sock>;
close $sock;
__END__
C:\test>winopen2_5
- syntax OK
Warning: something's wrong at -e line 1.
Died at -e line 1.
hello
With the rise and rise of 'Social' network sites: 'Computers are making people easier to use everyday'
Examine what is said, not who speaks -- Silence betokens consent -- Love the truth but pardon error.
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In the absence of evidence, opinion is indistinguishable from prejudice.
RIP Neil Armstrong
/iblockquote |