In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Christopher X66156 McMahon wrote: [top post moved down]
>> -----Original Message----- >> From: McMahon, Christopher x66156 >> Sent: Tuesday, June 24, 2003 10:35 AM >> To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' >> Subject: help sending hex EOL chars >> >> >> Hi... >> My TCP/IP server is printing input fine, now I'm trying to send the >> right output. >> The client for my server expects an EndOfLine character that is a hex >> 0D0A. (zero-dee-zero-ay) My code is doing this: >> >> my $eol = "\x{0D0A}"; [...] > Answering my own question: > > my $eol = "\r\n"; > > \r\n becomes 0D0A. > -C I don't know what module(s) you are using, but this reminds me of an article by Randall Schwartz I saw today that talks about IO::Socket::INET. It (for example) has an EOL method (CRLF) which he recommends as being more portable. There was also a picture. It's clear to me that as with radio djs, photographs of Perl gurus just get in the way of the virtual image we carry in our minds. ;-)) -- Kevin Pfeiffer International University Bremen -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]