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Home/ Questions/Q 940787
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T22:00:47+00:00 2026-05-15T22:00:47+00:00

I have the follwoing script #!/usr/bin/perl open IN, /tmp/file; s/(.*)=/$k{$1}++;$1$k{$1}=/e and print while <IN>;

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I have the follwoing script

#!/usr/bin/perl 
open IN, "/tmp/file"; 
s/(.*)=/$k{$1}++;"$1$k{$1}="/e and print while <IN>; 

how to print the output of the script to file_out in place to print to standard output?

lidia

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T22:00:47+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 10:00 pm
    #!/usr/bin/perl 
    open IN, "/tmp/file"; 
    open OUT, ">file_out.txt";
    s/(.*)=/$k{$1}++;"$1$k{$1}="/e and print OUT while <IN>; 
    

    Explanation:

    • `open IN, “/tmp/file”
      • open command to open file
      • IN filehandle name
      • /tmp/file name of file and specifier that it is for reading
        • if there is no modifier, it means reading
        • if there is a <, i.e. "</tmp/file" it also means reading
    • `open OUT, “>file_out.txt”
      • open command to open file
      • OUT filehandle name
      • >file_out.txt name of file and specifier that it is for reading
        • there must be a >, i.e. ">file_out.txt" to write
    • s/.../.../e your substitution (I assume you know what it does)
    • and is a boolean operator that short-circuits, meaning it only does the thing afterwards if the thing beforehand is true. In this case, it will only print if the substitution actually matched something.
    • print OUT print to the filehandle OUT
    • while <IN> for each line from the file behind filehandle IN

    Note:

    Used this way, it makes extensive use of the magical default variable $_. Do a search for $_ on the perlintro site. In short:

    • If you don’t tell a s/// substitution what string to work on, it uses $_
    • If you don’t tell a print what to print, it prints $_
    • If you don’t tell a while loop going through a filehandle’s data where to put each line, it gets put into $_

    Your program could have been rewritten:

    #!/usr/bin/perl 
    open IN, "/tmp/file"; 
    open OUT, ">file_out.txt";
    while( defined( $line = <IN> ) )
    {
      $line =~ s/(.*)=/$k{$1}++;"$1$k{$1}="/e or next;
      print OUT $line;
    }
    
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