TheMartianGeek:

From perlvar you can read a specified amount of data by locally setting $/. You can move a file handle to a specific file location using seek, so you can do something like (untested):

use strict; use warnings; use Fcntl qw( SEEK_SET ); . . . my @bytes; { my $input_location = 40; local $/=12; # Read 12 bytes open my $INF, '<', 'foo' or die; seek($INF, $input_location, SEEK_SET); my $t = <$INF>; @bytes = split //, $t; } # Do something with them @bytes = shuffle @bytes; # Write them to another file open my $OUF, '<+', 'bar' or die; my $output_location=1234; seek($OUF, $output_location, SEEK_SET); print $OUF, join("", @bytes);

Generally, when I'm looking for ideas on how to do something, I scan perlfunc, perlvar and (of course) CPAN!

...roboticus

When your only tool is a hammer, all problems look like your thumb.

Update: Changed to SEEK_SET (which is more likely to be the useful one) and also applied seek to input file, since he mentioned it in the OP.


In reply to Re^8: Question about binary file I/O by roboticus
in thread Question about binary file I/O by TheMartianGeek

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