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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T03:28:22+00:00 2026-05-15T03:28:22+00:00

Here’s the relevant excerpt from the documentation of the ref function: The value returned

  • 0

Here’s the relevant excerpt from the documentation of the ref function:

The value returned depends on the type of thing the reference is a reference to. Builtin types include:

SCALAR
ARRAY
HASH
CODE
REF
GLOB
LVALUE
FORMAT
IO
VSTRING
Regexp

Based on this, I imagined that calling ref on a filehandle would return 'IO'. Surprisingly, it doesn’t:

use strict;
use warnings;

open my $fileHandle, '<', 'aValidFile';
close $fileHandle;

print ref $fileHandle;     # prints 'GLOB', not 'IO'

perlref tries to explain why:

It isn’t possible to create a true
reference to an IO handle (filehandle
or dirhandle) using the backslash
operator. The most you can get is a
reference to a typeglob, which is
actually a complete symbol table
entry […] However, you can still
use type globs and globrefs
as though they were IO handles.


In what circumstances would ref return 'IO' then?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T03:28:23+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 3:28 am

    The only way to get an IO reference is to use the *FOO{THING} syntax:

    $ioref = *glob{IO};
    

    where glob is a named glob like STDIN or a reference like $fh. But once you have
    such a reference, it can be passed around or stored in arbitrary data structures just like any other scalar, so things like marshalling modules need to be savvy of it.

    Since a glob or globref can be used as a filehandle and implicitly get the contained IO thingy, there isn’t a lot of need for IO refs. The main exception is this:

    use Symbol;
    # replace *FOO{IO} handle but not $FOO, %FOO, etc.
    *FOO = geniosym;
    

    (geniosym returns a new semi-anonymous IO reference, and any non-glob reference-to-glob assignment only assigns to that particular reference’s part of the glob)

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