ADC Home > Reference Library > Reference > Mac OS X > Mac OS X Man Pages

 

This document is a Mac OS X manual page. Manual pages are a command-line technology for providing documentation. You can view these manual pages locally using the man(1) command. These manual pages come from many different sources, and thus, have a variety of writing styles.

For more information about the manual page format, see the manual page for manpages(5).



IO::Scalar(3)                        User Contributed Perl Documentation                       IO::Scalar(3)



NAME
       IO::Scalar - IO:: interface for reading/writing a scalar

SYNOPSIS
       Perform I/O on strings, using the basic OO interface...

           use 5.005;
           use IO::Scalar;
           $data = "My message:\n";

           ### Open a handle on a string, and append to it:
           $SH = new IO::Scalar \$data;
           $SH->print("Hello");
           $SH->print(", world!\nBye now!\n");
           print "The string is now: ", $data, "\n";

           ### Open a handle on a string, read it line-by-line, then close it:
           $SH = new IO::Scalar \$data;
           while (defined($_ = $SH->getline)) {
               print "Got line: $_";
           }
           $SH->close;

           ### Open a handle on a string, and slurp in all the lines:
           $SH = new IO::Scalar \$data;
           print "All lines:\n", $SH->getlines;

           ### Get the current position (either of two ways):
           $pos = $SH->getpos;
           $offset = $SH->tell;

           ### Set the current position (either of two ways):
           $SH->setpos($pos);
           $SH->seek($offset, 0);

           ### Open an anonymous temporary scalar:
           $SH = new IO::Scalar;
           $SH->print("Hi there!");
           print "I printed: ", ${$SH->sref}, "\n";      ### get at value

       Don't like OO for your I/O?  No problem.  Thanks to the magic of an invisible tie(), the following
       now works out of the box, just as it does with IO::Handle:

           use 5.005;
           use IO::Scalar;
           $data = "My message:\n";

           ### Open a handle on a string, and append to it:
           $SH = new IO::Scalar \$data;
           print $SH "Hello";
           print $SH ", world!\nBye now!\n";
           print "The string is now: ", $data, "\n";

           ### Open a handle on a string, read it line-by-line, then close it:
           $SH = new IO::Scalar \$data;
           while (<$SH>) {
               print "Got line: $_";
           }
           close $SH;

           ### Open a handle on a string, and slurp in all the lines:
           $SH = new IO::Scalar \$data;
           print "All lines:\n", <$SH>;

           ### Get the current position (WARNING: requires 5.6):
           $offset = tell $SH;

           ### Set the current position (WARNING: requires 5.6):
           seek $SH, $offset, 0;

           ### Open an anonymous temporary scalar:
           $SH = new IO::Scalar;
           print $SH "Hi there!";
           print "I printed: ", ${$SH->sref}, "\n";      ### get at value

       And for you folks with 1.x code out there: the old tie() style still works, though this is
       unnecessary and deprecated:

           use IO::Scalar;

           ### Writing to a scalar...
           my $s;
           tie *OUT, 'IO::Scalar', \$s;
           print OUT "line 1\nline 2\n", "line 3\n";
           print "String is now: $s\n"

           ### Reading and writing an anonymous scalar...
           tie *OUT, 'IO::Scalar';
           print OUT "line 1\nline 2\n", "line 3\n";
           tied(OUT)->seek(0,0);
           while (<OUT>) {
               print "Got line: ", $_;
           }

       Stringification works, too!

           my $SH = new IO::Scalar \$data;
           print $SH "Hello, ";
           print $SH "world!";
           print "I printed: $SH\n";

DESCRIPTION
       This class is part of the IO::Stringy distribution; see IO::Stringy for change log and general
       information.

       The IO::Scalar class implements objects which behave just like IO::Handle (or FileHandle) objects,
       except that you may use them to write to (or read from) scalars.  These handles are automatically
       tiehandle'd (though please see "WARNINGS" for information relevant to your Perl version).

       Basically, this:

           my $s;
           $SH = new IO::Scalar \$s;
           $SH->print("Hel", "lo, ");         ### OO style
           $SH->print("world!\n");            ### ditto

       Or this:

           my $s;
           $SH = tie *OUT, 'IO::Scalar', \$s;
           print OUT "Hel", "lo, ";           ### non-OO style
           print OUT "world!\n";              ### ditto

       Causes $s to be set to:

           "Hello, world!\n"

PUBLIC INTERFACE
       Construction


       new [ARGS...]
           Class method.  Return a new, unattached scalar handle.  If any arguments are given, they're sent
           to open().

       open [SCALARREF]
           Instance method.  Open the scalar handle on a new scalar, pointed to by SCALARREF.  If no
           SCALARREF is given, a "private" scalar is created to hold the file data.

           Returns the self object on success, undefined on error.

       opened
           Instance method.  Is the scalar handle opened on something?

       close
           Instance method.  Disassociate the scalar handle from its underlying scalar.  Done automatically
           on destroy.

       Input and output


       flush
           Instance method.  No-op, provided for OO compatibility.

       getc
           Instance method.  Return the next character, or undef if none remain.

       getline
           Instance method.  Return the next line, or undef on end of string.  Can safely be called in an
           array context.  Currently, lines are delimited by "\n".

       getlines
           Instance method.  Get all remaining lines.  It will croak() if accidentally called in a scalar
           context.

       print ARGS...
           Instance method.  Print ARGS to the underlying scalar.

           Warning: this continues to always cause a seek to the end of the string, but if you perform
           seek()s and tell()s, it is still safer to explicitly seek-to-end before subsequent print()s.

       read BUF, NBYTES, [OFFSET]
           Instance method.  Read some bytes from the scalar.  Returns the number of bytes actually read, 0
           on end-of-file, undef on error.

       write BUF, NBYTES, [OFFSET]
           Instance method.  Write some bytes to the scalar.

       sysread BUF, LEN, [OFFSET]
           Instance method.  Read some bytes from the scalar.  Returns the number of bytes actually read, 0
           on end-of-file, undef on error.

       syswrite BUF, NBYTES, [OFFSET]
           Instance method.  Write some bytes to the scalar.

       Seeking/telling and other attributes


       autoflush
           Instance method.  No-op, provided for OO compatibility.

       binmode
           Instance method.  No-op, provided for OO compatibility.

       clearerr
           Instance method.  Clear the error and EOF flags.  A no-op.

       eof Instance method.  Are we at end of file?

       seek OFFSET, WHENCE
           Instance method.  Seek to a given position in the stream.

       sysseek OFFSET, WHENCE
           Instance method. Identical to "seek OFFSET, WHENCE", q.v.

       tell
           Instance method.  Return the current position in the stream, as a numeric offset.

       setpos POS
           Instance method.  Set the current position, using the opaque value returned by "getpos()".

       getpos
           Instance method.  Return the current position in the string, as an opaque object.

       sref
           Instance method.  Return a reference to the underlying scalar.

WARNINGS
       Perl's TIEHANDLE spec was incomplete prior to 5.005_57; it was missing support for "seek()",
       "tell()", and "eof()".  Attempting to use these functions with an IO::Scalar will not work prior to
       5.005_57. IO::Scalar will not have the relevant methods invoked; and even worse, this kind of bug can
       lie dormant for a while.  If you turn warnings on (via $^W or "perl -w"), and you see something like
       this...

           attempt to seek on unopened filehandle

       ...then you are probably trying to use one of these functions on an IO::Scalar with an old Perl.  The
       remedy is to simply use the OO version; e.g.:

           $SH->seek(0,0);    ### GOOD: will work on any 5.005
           seek($SH,0,0);     ### WARNING: will only work on 5.005_57 and beyond

VERSION
       $Id: Scalar.pm,v 1.6 2005/02/10 21:21:53 dfs Exp $

AUTHORS
       Primary Maintainer

       David F. Skoll (dfs@roaringpenguin.com).

       Principal author

       Eryq (eryq@zeegee.com).  President, ZeeGee Software Inc (http://www.zeegee.com)

       Other contributors

       The full set of contributors always includes the folks mentioned in "CHANGE LOG" in IO::Stringy.  But
       just the same, special thanks to the following individuals for their invaluable contributions (if
       I've forgotten or misspelled your name, please email me!):

       Andy Glew, for contributing "getc()".

       Brandon Browning, for suggesting "opened()".

       David Richter, for finding and fixing the bug in "PRINTF()".

       Eric L. Brine, for his offset-using read() and write() implementations.

       Richard Jones, for his patches to massively improve the performance of "getline()" and add "sysread"
       and "syswrite".

       B. K. Oxley (binkley), for stringification and inheritance improvements, and sundry good ideas.

       Doug Wilson, for the IO::Handle inheritance and automatic tie-ing.

SEE ALSO
       IO::String, which is quite similar but which was designed more-recently and with an IO::Handle-like
       interface in mind, so you could mix OO- and native-filehandle usage without using tied().

       Note: as of version 2.x, these classes all work like their IO::Handle counterparts, so we have
       comparable functionality to IO::String.



perl v5.8.8                                      2005-02-10                                    IO::Scalar(3)

Did this document help you?
Yes: Tell us what works for you.
It’s good, but: Report typos, inaccuracies, and so forth.
It wasn’t helpful: Tell us what would have helped.