An Alternate Syntax for Globbing

Though we use the term globbing freely, and we talk about the glob operator, you might not see the word glob in many of the programs that use globbing. Why not? Well, most legacy code was written before the glob operator was given a name. Instead, it was called up by the angle-bracket syntax, similar to reading from a filehandle:

    my @all_files = <*>; ## exactly the same as my @all_files = glob "*";

The value between the angle brackets is interpolated similarly to a double-quoted string, which means that Perl variables are expanded to their current Perl values before being globbed:

    my $dir = "/etc";
    my @dir_files = <$dir/* $dir/.*>;

Here, we’ve fetched all the non-dot and dot files from the designated directory because $dir has been expanded to its current value.

Since using angle brackets means both filehandle reading and globbing, how does Perl decide which of the two operators to use? Well, a filehandle has to be a Perl identifier. If the item between the angle brackets is strictly a Perl identifier, it’ll be a filehandle read; otherwise, it’ll be a globbing operation, as in this example:

    my @files = <FRED/*>;  ## a glob
    my @lines = <FRED>;    ## a filehandle read
    my $name = "FRED";
    my @files = <$name/*>; ## a glob

The one exception is if the contents are a simple scalar variable (not an element of a hash or array), then it’s an indirect filehandle read,[276] where the variable contents give the name of the filehandle you want to read:

 my $name = "FRED"; ...

Get Learning Perl, Fourth Edition now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.