Good style for Perl includes using the strict and warnings pragmas, and
preferring lexical file handles over bareword file handles.  Using
lexical file handles necessitates being explicit when $_ is printed, so
that Perl does not get confused and instead print the glob ref.

The benefit of this modernization is that a formerly obscured bug is now
visible, which will be fixed in a followup patch.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sand...@crustytoothpaste.net>
---
 Documentation/cat-texi.perl | 15 +++++++++------
 1 file changed, 9 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-)

diff --git a/Documentation/cat-texi.perl b/Documentation/cat-texi.perl
index b1fe52e8b..1bc84d3c7 100755
--- a/Documentation/cat-texi.perl
+++ b/Documentation/cat-texi.perl
@@ -1,9 +1,12 @@
 #!/usr/bin/perl -w
 
+use strict;
+use warnings;
+
 my @menu = ();
 my $output = $ARGV[0];
 
-open TMP, '>', "$output.tmp";
+open my $tmp, '>', "$output.tmp";
 
 while (<STDIN>) {
        next if (/^\\input texinfo/../\@node Top/);
@@ -13,9 +16,9 @@ while (<STDIN>) {
        }
        s/\(\@pxref\{\[(URLS|REMOTES)\]}\)//;
        s/\@anchor\{[^{}]*\}//g;
-       print TMP;
+       print $tmp $_;
 }
-close TMP;
+close $tmp;
 
 printf '\input texinfo
 @setfilename gitman.info
@@ -34,10 +37,10 @@ for (@menu) {
        print "* ${_}::\n";
 }
 print "\@end menu\n";
-open TMP, '<', "$output.tmp";
-while (<TMP>) {
+open $tmp, '<', "$output.tmp";
+while (<$tmp>) {
        print;
 }
-close TMP;
+close $tmp;
 print "\@bye\n";
 unlink "$output.tmp";

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