How to handle filenames with spaces?

那年仲夏 提交于 2019-11-28 12:12:07

Your code doesn't add any quotes around the filenames.

Try

"\"$_\""

and

"\"$outfile\""

Stop using system() to make a call that can be done with a portable library. Perl has a the File::Copy module, use that instead and you don't have to worry about things like this plus you get much better OS portability.

system is rarely the right answer, use File::Copy;

To concatenate all files:

use File::Copy;
my @in = glob "*.mp3";
my $out = "final.mp3";

open my $outh, ">", $out;
for my $file (@in) {
    next if $file eq $out;
    copy($file, $outh);
}
close $outh;

Issues may arise when you're trying to access the variable $_ inside an inner block. The safest way, change:

foreach (@files)

to:

foreach $file (@files)

Then do the necessary changes on @args, and escape doublequotes to include them in the string..

@args = ('copy' ,"/b ","\"$file\"","+","$outfile", "$outfile");
...
@args = ('copy' ,"/b ","$outfile","+","\"$file\"", "$outfile");

In windows you can normally put double quotes around the filenames (and/or paths) allowing special chars i.e "long file names".

C:\"my long path\this is a file.mp3"

Edit:

Does this not work?

system("copy /b \"$_\"+$outfile $outfile");

(NOTE THE DOUBLE quotes within the string not single quotes)

$filename =~ s/\ /\ /;

what ever the filename is just use slash to refrence spaces

易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!