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7.4. Making Perl Report Filenames in Errors

Problem

Your program works with files, but Perl's errors and warnings only report the last used filehandle, not the name of the file.

Solution

Use the filename as the filehandle:

open($path, "< $path")
    or die "Couldn't open $path for reading : $!\n";

Discussion

Ordinarily, error messages say:

Argument "3\n" isn't numeric in multiply at tallyweb line 16, <LOG> chunk 17.

The filehandle LOG doesn't help much because you don't know which file the handle was connected to. By using the filename itself as indirect filehandle, Perl produces more informative errors and warnings:

Argument "3\n" isn't numeric in multiply at tallyweb
    line 16, </usr/local/data/mylog3.dat> chunk 17.

Unfortunately, this doesn't work with strict refs turned on because the variable $path doesn't really have a filehandle in it, but just a string that sometimes behaves as one. The chunk mentioned in warnings and error messages is the current value of the $. variable.

See Also

Recipe 7.1; the open function in perlfunc (1) and Chapter 3 of Programming Perl


Previous: 7.3. Expanding Tildes in FilenamesPerl CookbookNext: 7.5. Creating Temporary Files
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