The chomp Operator

The first time you read about the chomp operator, it seems overspecialized. It works on a variable, and the variable has to hold a string. If the string ends in a newline character, chomp can get rid of the newline. That’s (nearly) all it does as in this example:

    $text = "a line of text\n"; # Or the same thing from <STDIN>
    chomp($text);               # Gets rid of the newline character

It turns out to be so useful, you’ll put it into nearly every program you write. As you see, it’s the best way to remove a trailing newline from a string in a variable. In fact, there’s an easier way to use chomp because of a simple rule: whenever you need a variable in Perl, you can use an assignment instead. Perl does the assignment and then it uses the variable in whatever way you requested. The most common use of chomp looks like this:

    chomp($text = <STDIN>); # Read the text, without the newline character
     
    $text = <STDIN>;        # Do the same thing...
    chomp($text);           # ...but in two steps

At first glance, the combined chomp may not seem to be the easy way, especially if it seems more complex. If you think of it as two operations, read a line and chomp it, then it’s more natural to write it as two statements. If you think of it as one operation, read just the text and not the newline, it’s more natural to write the one statement. Since most other Perl programmers are going to write it that way, you may as well get used to it now.

chomp is a function. As a function, it has a return value, which is the ...

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