I've used something like this little stub on the off times I've needed to "guess" at filetypes:

sub guess_newline { my $file = shift; open my $F, '<', $file or return undef; my ($buf, $sep); until ( eof($F) or defined $sep) { # read a 1-k chunk + a random few bytes read( $F, $buf, 1024+int(rand(5)) ); # the trailing dot below is important, in case part of a newline i +s # truncated in the read! $sep = $1 if $buf=~m/(\x0A|\x0D|\x0D\x0A)./; } close $F; return $sep; }

The purpose of the random length change is a workaround for a couple files I've run across where the lines (including newline) were exactly 1024 bytes. As a result, my regex never matched. ;-)

This works very well like this:

{ local $/ = guess_newline($filename) || die "Can't guess sep for $fi +lename"; open my $IN, '<', $filename or die "Can't read $filename: $!"; while (<$IN>) { ... } }
<radiant.matrix>
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In reply to Re: Different linebreaks for different folks... by radiantmatrix
in thread Different linebreaks for different folks... by EvanK

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