Once we have a directory handle open, we can read the list of names with readdir, which takes a single parameter: the directory handle. Each invocation of readdir in a scalar context returns the next filename (just the basename: you'll never get any slashes in the return value) in a seemingly random order.[5] If there are no more names, readdir returns undef.[6] Invoking readdir in a list context returns all of the remaining names as a list with one name per element. Here's an example of listing all of the names from the /etc directory:
opendir(ETC,"/etc") || die "no etc?: $!";
while ($name = readdir(ETC)) { # scalar context, one per loop
print "$name\n"; # prints ., .., passwd, group, and so on
}
closedir(ETC);[5] Specifically, this is the order in which the filenames are kept in the directory - the same unordered order you get back from the find command or ls -f
under UNIX.[6] Which means you'll have to use
while (defined ($name = readdir (...))when working under Perl's-woption.
And here's a way of getting them all in alphabetical order with the assistance of sort:
opendir(ETC,"/etc") || die "no etc?: $!"; foreach $name (sort readdir(ETC)) { # list context, sorted print "$name\n"; # prints ., .., passwd, group, and so on } closedir(ETC);
The names include files that begin with a dot. This is unlike globbing with <*>, which does not return names that begin with a dot. On the other hand, it is like the shell's echo*.