what you can do is open the file, read it line by line and add it to a total:
#!/usr/bin/perl -w use strict; #-- our total my $total = 0; #-- try open the file. if we can't, print the reason open(FILE,"fileA") || die $!; #-- read the file line by line and add it to $total. #-- normally, when you read from a file, the line will #-- contains a newline character at the end and you will #-- want to remove it with the chop or chomp function. #-- in your case, it isn't neccessary so i have avoid it. $total += $_ while(<FILE>); #-- finished. close the file close(FILE); #-- print the total with a $ sign print "\$$total\n"; __END__ i notice that you have the line "0014595h" in your file. this will cause Perl(with the -w thingy) to issue a warning when we are executing the "$total += $_" line. the above simply ignore that and turns "0014595h" into "14595" david James Parsons wrote: > This is probably a very simple question for the group.but here's goes. > Please keep in mind I'm just a beginner. > > I have the following file and I would like to add the lines in the file > and get a total with a floating $ sign. > > fileA. > > 00000010 > 00000032 > 00000043 > 00000032 > 00000014 > 00000042 > 00000039 > 00003103 > 00230004 > 0014595h > > > Thanks > > James Parsons -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]