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Home/ Questions/Q 8892415
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 14, 20262026-06-14T22:59:30+00:00 2026-06-14T22:59:30+00:00

I’m using Perl’s diamond <> operator to read from files specified on the command

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I’m using Perl’s diamond <> operator to read from files specified on the command line.

I’d like to be able to report messages like "Trouble on line $. of file $FILENAME", but how can I tell which file is currently used by the diamond?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-14T22:59:31+00:00Added an answer on June 14, 2026 at 10:59 pm

    See perlvar:

        $ARGV
    
    Contains the name of the current file when reading from <> .
    

    But also consider $. in perlvar. If you do this with perl -n it might not turn out the way you want it, because the counter is not reset in the perl -n use case.

    $.
    

    Current line number for the last filehandle accessed.

    Each filehandle in Perl counts the number of lines that have been read
    from it. (Depending on the value of $/ , Perl’s idea of what
    constitutes a line may not match yours.) When a line is read from a
    filehandle (via readline() or <> ), or when tell() or seek() is called
    on it, $. becomes an alias to the line counter for that filehandle.

    You can adjust the counter by assigning to $. , but this will not
    actually move the seek pointer. Localizing $. will not localize the
    filehandle’s line count. Instead, it will localize perl’s notion of
    which filehandle $. is currently aliased to.

    $. is reset when the filehandle is closed, but not when an open
    filehandle is reopened without an intervening close(). For more
    details, see I/O Operators in perlop. Because <> never does an
    explicit close, line numbers increase across ARGV files (but see
    examples in eof).

    You can also use HANDLE->input_line_number(EXPR) to access the line
    counter for a given filehandle without having to worry about which
    handle you last accessed.

    Mnemonic: many programs use “.” to mean the current line number.

    Here’s an example:

    $ perl -nE 'say "$., $ARGV";' foo.pl bar.pl
    1, foo.pl
    2, foo.pl
    3, foo.pl
    4, foo.pl
    5, foo.pl
    6, foo.pl
    7, foo.pl
    8, foo.pl
    9, foo.pl
    10, foo.pl
    11, foo.pl
    12, foo.pl
    13, bar.pl
    14, bar.pl
    15, bar.pl
    

    If you want it to reset, you need to check for eof at the end of your read loop (thanks @Borodin). Also see the perldoc for eof:

    $ perl -nE 'say "$., $ARGV"; close ARGV if eof' foo.pl bar.pl
    
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