Chops off the last character of a string and returns the character chopped. It's used primarily to remove the newline from the end of an input record, but is much more efficient than s/\n//
because it neither scans nor copies the string. If VARIABLE is omitted, chops $_
. Example:
while (<>) {
chop; # avoid \n on last field
@array = split(/:/);
#...
}
You can actually chop anything that's an lvalue, including an assignment:
chop($cwd = `pwd`);
chop($answer = <STDIN>);
If you chop a list, each element is chopped. Only the value of the last chop
is returned.
Note that chop
returns the last character. To return all but the last character, use substr($string, 0, -1)
.