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Home/ Questions/Q 6128667
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 23, 20262026-05-23T16:39:10+00:00 2026-05-23T16:39:10+00:00

Possible Duplicate: What's the difference between iterating over a file with foreach or while

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Possible Duplicate:
What's the difference between iterating over a file with foreach or while in Perl?

In the while loop, Perl reads a line of input, puts it into a
variable, and runs the body of the loop. Then, it goes back to find
another line of input. But in the foreach loop, the line-input
operator is being used in a list context (since foreach needs a list
to iterate through). So it has to read all of the input before the
loop can start running. That difference will become apparent when the
input is coming from your 400 MB web server logfile! It’s generally
best to use code like the while loop’s shortcut, which will process
input a line at a time, whenever possible. Source-The Llama book

So should I use while every time? What can be the possible situations where foreach loop will dominate over while?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-23T16:39:11+00:00Added an answer on May 23, 2026 at 4:39 pm

    As you point out, iterating over a file with foreach slurps the file into memory before the loop starts.

    While it’s true that one of Perl’s credos is “There Is More Than One Way To Do It”, there exist ways to do things that have no real benefit over some other way. foreach is probably a poor alternative for looping over a file. If you’re going to iterate over the file line by line, you generally use while(). If you’re going to slurp the whole file into memory at once, you do that in one step and be done with it.

    There are sometimes advantages to slurping the whole file. One of them, for example, is minimizing the time that the file must be opened. More often than not, it’s for convenience in dealing with data that doesn’t really fit the line by line or record by record model. foreach() slurps the file, but doesn’t really give a good opportunity to close it immediately, so that benefit is gone. And looping over the file with foreach doesn’t help you much if your data has to be treated as a chunk. So that reason is gone too. In the end, you get the negative of slurping a file, with none of the positives of slurping a file.

    There will always be someone who comes up with a clever reason that others haven’t considered. But I have yet to see it. (Usually when I say something like that someone posts “it”, so it’s always dangerous to suggest it absolutely has no merit.) Let’s put it this way: Until you discover one of the extremely few good reasons for using foreach to iterate over a file, don’t worry about it. Surely when you do make that discovery, you’ll know it is time.

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