 
Provides object methods for working with filehandles. Provides the following methods.
| new | 
$fh = new FileHandle [filename[, mode]]
Constructor. Creates a FileHandle, which is a reference to a newly created symbol. The optional parameters, filename and mode, are passed to open. The FileHandle object is returned if the open succeeds; otherwise, it is destroyed.
| new_from_fd | 
$fh = new_from_fd FileHandle fd, mode
Constructor. Creates a FileHandle, but it takes the file descriptor, fd, instead of filename as a parameter, along with mode; the parameters are required.
| fdopen | 
$fh->fdopen fdname [openmode]
Like open, except that its first parameter is not a filename but a filehandle name, a FileHandle object, or a file descriptor number.
| getpos | 
$pos = $fh->getpos
If the C functions fgetpos(3) and fsetpos(3) are available, getpos returns the current position, $pos, of the FileHandle.
| open | 
$fh->open filename [openmode]
Takes filename and, optionally, the open mode, and opens a file. If the mode is present, it can be in Perl form (e.g., >, +<) or in POSIX form (e.g., w, r+).
| setpos | 
$fh->setpos pos
Uses the value (pos) returned by getpos to restore a previous position of the FileHandle.
| setvbuf | 
$fh->setvbuf(params)
Takes the same parameters as the C function setvbuf(3) and uses the C function to set the buffering policy for the FileHandle.
The following additional FileHandle methods act as front-ends for the corresponding built-in Perl functions (see the O'Reilly book Programming Perl or the perlfunc manpage for more details):
| clearerr | getc | 
| close | gets | 
| eof | seek | 
| fileno | tell | 
The next group of FileHandle methods correspond to Perl special variables (see Programming Perl or the perlvar manpage):
| autoflush | format_page_number | 
| format_formfeed | format_top_name | 
| format_line_break_characters | input_line_number | 
| format_lines_left | input_record_separator | 
| format_lines_per_page | output_field_separator | 
| format_name | output_record_separator | 
Finally, the following methods are useful:
 
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