Quick and dirty answer:
ls -l *.TMP | perl -anle 'print "Mypath\\MyPerl_2.pl $F[-1]"'
You can replace 'print' by system to execute commands. Caveat: if a filename contains a whitespace, this oneliner is wrong.
Here, the real code executed (oneliners are not easy for beginners):
$ perl -MO=Deparse -anle 'print "Mypath\\MyPerl_2.pl $F[-1]"'
BEGIN { $/ = "\n"; $\ = "\n"; }
LINE: while (defined($_ = <ARGV>)) {
chomp $_;
our(@F) = split(' ', $_, 0);
print "Mypath\\MyPerl_2.pl $F[-1]";
}
As you can see, it use split.
You could want to use open to open a file.
http://perldoc.perl.org/perlop.html#I%2fO-Operators to understand while ( ... = <>)
And see how regex works in perlretut...
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