I have a variable that is entered at a prompt:
my $name = <>;
I want to append a fixed string '_one'to this (in a separate variable).
E.g. if $name = Smith then it becomes 'Smith_one'
I have tried several various ways which do not give me the right results, such as:
my $one = "${name}_one";
^ The _one appears on the next line when I print it out and when I use it, the _one is not included at all.
Also:
my $one = $name."_one";
^ The '_one' appears at the beginning of the string.
And:
my $end = '_one';
my $one = $name.$end;
or
my $one = "$name$end";
None of these produce the result I want, so I must be missing something related to how the input is formatted from the prompt, perhaps. Ideas appreciated!
Your problem is unrelated to string appending: When you read a line (e.g. via
<>), then the record input separator is included in that string; this is usually a newline\n. To remove the newline,chompthe variable:To interpolate a variable into a string, you usually don’t need the
${name}syntax you used. These lines will all append_oneto your string and create a new string:And this will append
_oneto your string and still store it in$name: