Document perlthanks
[p5sagit/p5-mst-13.2.git] / pod / perlfaq4.pod
CommitLineData
68dc0745 1=head1 NAME
2
fb2fe781 3perlfaq4 - Data Manipulation ($Revision: 10394 $)
68dc0745 4
5=head1 DESCRIPTION
6
ae3d0b9f 7This section of the FAQ answers questions related to manipulating
8numbers, dates, strings, arrays, hashes, and miscellaneous data issues.
68dc0745 9
10=head1 Data: Numbers
11
46fc3d4c 12=head2 Why am I getting long decimals (eg, 19.9499999999999) instead of the numbers I should be getting (eg, 19.95)?
13
ac9dac7f 14Internally, your computer represents floating-point numbers in binary.
15Digital (as in powers of two) computers cannot store all numbers
16exactly. Some real numbers lose precision in the process. This is a
17problem with how computers store numbers and affects all computer
18languages, not just Perl.
46fc3d4c 19
ee891a00 20L<perlnumber> shows the gory details of number representations and
ac9dac7f 21conversions.
49d635f9 22
ac9dac7f 23To limit the number of decimal places in your numbers, you can use the
24printf or sprintf function. See the L<"Floating Point
25Arithmetic"|perlop> for more details.
49d635f9 26
27 printf "%.2f", 10/3;
197aec24 28
49d635f9 29 my $number = sprintf "%.2f", 10/3;
197aec24 30
32969b6e 31=head2 Why is int() broken?
32
ac9dac7f 33Your C<int()> is most probably working just fine. It's the numbers that
32969b6e 34aren't quite what you think.
35
ac9dac7f 36First, see the answer to "Why am I getting long decimals
32969b6e 37(eg, 19.9499999999999) instead of the numbers I should be getting
38(eg, 19.95)?".
39
40For example, this
41
ac9dac7f 42 print int(0.6/0.2-2), "\n";
32969b6e 43
44will in most computers print 0, not 1, because even such simple
45numbers as 0.6 and 0.2 cannot be presented exactly by floating-point
46numbers. What you think in the above as 'three' is really more like
472.9999999999999995559.
48
68dc0745 49=head2 Why isn't my octal data interpreted correctly?
50
49d635f9 51Perl only understands octal and hex numbers as such when they occur as
52literals in your program. Octal literals in perl must start with a
ac9dac7f 53leading C<0> and hexadecimal literals must start with a leading C<0x>.
49d635f9 54If they are read in from somewhere and assigned, no automatic
ac9dac7f 55conversion takes place. You must explicitly use C<oct()> or C<hex()> if you
56want the values converted to decimal. C<oct()> interprets hexadecimal (C<0x350>),
57octal (C<0350> or even without the leading C<0>, like C<377>) and binary
58(C<0b1010>) numbers, while C<hex()> only converts hexadecimal ones, with
59or without a leading C<0x>, such as C<0x255>, C<3A>, C<ff>, or C<deadbeef>.
33ce146f 60The inverse mapping from decimal to octal can be done with either the
ac9dac7f 61<%o> or C<%O> C<sprintf()> formats.
68dc0745 62
ac9dac7f 63This problem shows up most often when people try using C<chmod()>,
64C<mkdir()>, C<umask()>, or C<sysopen()>, which by widespread tradition
65typically take permissions in octal.
68dc0745 66
ac9dac7f 67 chmod(644, $file); # WRONG
68 chmod(0644, $file); # right
68dc0745 69
197aec24 70Note the mistake in the first line was specifying the decimal literal
ac9dac7f 71C<644>, rather than the intended octal literal C<0644>. The problem can
33ce146f 72be seen with:
73
ac9dac7f 74 printf("%#o",644); # prints 01204
33ce146f 75
76Surely you had not intended C<chmod(01204, $file);> - did you? If you
77want to use numeric literals as arguments to chmod() et al. then please
197aec24 78try to express them as octal constants, that is with a leading zero and
ac9dac7f 79with the following digits restricted to the set C<0..7>.
33ce146f 80
65acb1b1 81=head2 Does Perl have a round() function? What about ceil() and floor()? Trig functions?
68dc0745 82
ac9dac7f 83Remember that C<int()> merely truncates toward 0. For rounding to a
84certain number of digits, C<sprintf()> or C<printf()> is usually the
85easiest route.
92c2ed05 86
ac9dac7f 87 printf("%.3f", 3.1415926535); # prints 3.142
68dc0745 88
ac9dac7f 89The C<POSIX> module (part of the standard Perl distribution)
90implements C<ceil()>, C<floor()>, and a number of other mathematical
91and trigonometric functions.
68dc0745 92
ac9dac7f 93 use POSIX;
94 $ceil = ceil(3.5); # 4
95 $floor = floor(3.5); # 3
92c2ed05 96
ac9dac7f 97In 5.000 to 5.003 perls, trigonometry was done in the C<Math::Complex>
98module. With 5.004, the C<Math::Trig> module (part of the standard Perl
46fc3d4c 99distribution) implements the trigonometric functions. Internally it
ac9dac7f 100uses the C<Math::Complex> module and some functions can break out from
46fc3d4c 101the real axis into the complex plane, for example the inverse sine of
1022.
68dc0745 103
104Rounding in financial applications can have serious implications, and
105the rounding method used should be specified precisely. In these
106cases, it probably pays not to trust whichever system rounding is
107being used by Perl, but to instead implement the rounding function you
108need yourself.
109
65acb1b1 110To see why, notice how you'll still have an issue on half-way-point
111alternation:
112
ac9dac7f 113 for ($i = 0; $i < 1.01; $i += 0.05) { printf "%.1f ",$i}
65acb1b1 114
ac9dac7f 115 0.0 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.3 0.3 0.4 0.4 0.5 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.7
116 0.8 0.8 0.9 0.9 1.0 1.0
65acb1b1 117
ac9dac7f 118Don't blame Perl. It's the same as in C. IEEE says we have to do
119this. Perl numbers whose absolute values are integers under 2**31 (on
12032 bit machines) will work pretty much like mathematical integers.
121Other numbers are not guaranteed.
65acb1b1 122
6f0efb17 123=head2 How do I convert between numeric representations/bases/radixes?
68dc0745 124
ac9dac7f 125As always with Perl there is more than one way to do it. Below are a
126few examples of approaches to making common conversions between number
127representations. This is intended to be representational rather than
128exhaustive.
68dc0745 129
ac9dac7f 130Some of the examples later in L<perlfaq4> use the C<Bit::Vector>
131module from CPAN. The reason you might choose C<Bit::Vector> over the
132perl built in functions is that it works with numbers of ANY size,
133that it is optimized for speed on some operations, and for at least
134some programmers the notation might be familiar.
d92eb7b0 135
818c4caa 136=over 4
137
138=item How do I convert hexadecimal into decimal
d92eb7b0 139
ac9dac7f 140Using perl's built in conversion of C<0x> notation:
6761e064 141
ac9dac7f 142 $dec = 0xDEADBEEF;
7207e29d 143
ac9dac7f 144Using the C<hex> function:
6761e064 145
ac9dac7f 146 $dec = hex("DEADBEEF");
6761e064 147
ac9dac7f 148Using C<pack>:
6761e064 149
ac9dac7f 150 $dec = unpack("N", pack("H8", substr("0" x 8 . "DEADBEEF", -8)));
6761e064 151
ac9dac7f 152Using the CPAN module C<Bit::Vector>:
6761e064 153
ac9dac7f 154 use Bit::Vector;
155 $vec = Bit::Vector->new_Hex(32, "DEADBEEF");
156 $dec = $vec->to_Dec();
6761e064 157
818c4caa 158=item How do I convert from decimal to hexadecimal
6761e064 159
ac9dac7f 160Using C<sprintf>:
6761e064 161
ac9dac7f 162 $hex = sprintf("%X", 3735928559); # upper case A-F
163 $hex = sprintf("%x", 3735928559); # lower case a-f
6761e064 164
ac9dac7f 165Using C<unpack>:
6761e064 166
ac9dac7f 167 $hex = unpack("H*", pack("N", 3735928559));
6761e064 168
ac9dac7f 169Using C<Bit::Vector>:
6761e064 170
ac9dac7f 171 use Bit::Vector;
172 $vec = Bit::Vector->new_Dec(32, -559038737);
173 $hex = $vec->to_Hex();
6761e064 174
ac9dac7f 175And C<Bit::Vector> supports odd bit counts:
6761e064 176
ac9dac7f 177 use Bit::Vector;
178 $vec = Bit::Vector->new_Dec(33, 3735928559);
179 $vec->Resize(32); # suppress leading 0 if unwanted
180 $hex = $vec->to_Hex();
6761e064 181
818c4caa 182=item How do I convert from octal to decimal
6761e064 183
184Using Perl's built in conversion of numbers with leading zeros:
185
ac9dac7f 186 $dec = 033653337357; # note the leading 0!
6761e064 187
ac9dac7f 188Using the C<oct> function:
6761e064 189
ac9dac7f 190 $dec = oct("33653337357");
6761e064 191
ac9dac7f 192Using C<Bit::Vector>:
6761e064 193
ac9dac7f 194 use Bit::Vector;
195 $vec = Bit::Vector->new(32);
196 $vec->Chunk_List_Store(3, split(//, reverse "33653337357"));
197 $dec = $vec->to_Dec();
6761e064 198
818c4caa 199=item How do I convert from decimal to octal
6761e064 200
ac9dac7f 201Using C<sprintf>:
6761e064 202
ac9dac7f 203 $oct = sprintf("%o", 3735928559);
6761e064 204
ac9dac7f 205Using C<Bit::Vector>:
6761e064 206
ac9dac7f 207 use Bit::Vector;
208 $vec = Bit::Vector->new_Dec(32, -559038737);
209 $oct = reverse join('', $vec->Chunk_List_Read(3));
6761e064 210
818c4caa 211=item How do I convert from binary to decimal
6761e064 212
2c646907 213Perl 5.6 lets you write binary numbers directly with
ac9dac7f 214the C<0b> notation:
2c646907 215
ac9dac7f 216 $number = 0b10110110;
6f0efb17 217
ac9dac7f 218Using C<oct>:
6f0efb17 219
ac9dac7f 220 my $input = "10110110";
221 $decimal = oct( "0b$input" );
2c646907 222
ac9dac7f 223Using C<pack> and C<ord>:
d92eb7b0 224
ac9dac7f 225 $decimal = ord(pack('B8', '10110110'));
68dc0745 226
ac9dac7f 227Using C<pack> and C<unpack> for larger strings:
6761e064 228
ac9dac7f 229 $int = unpack("N", pack("B32",
6761e064 230 substr("0" x 32 . "11110101011011011111011101111", -32)));
ac9dac7f 231 $dec = sprintf("%d", $int);
6761e064 232
ac9dac7f 233 # substr() is used to left pad a 32 character string with zeros.
6761e064 234
ac9dac7f 235Using C<Bit::Vector>:
6761e064 236
ac9dac7f 237 $vec = Bit::Vector->new_Bin(32, "11011110101011011011111011101111");
238 $dec = $vec->to_Dec();
6761e064 239
818c4caa 240=item How do I convert from decimal to binary
6761e064 241
ac9dac7f 242Using C<sprintf> (perl 5.6+):
4dfcc30b 243
ac9dac7f 244 $bin = sprintf("%b", 3735928559);
4dfcc30b 245
ac9dac7f 246Using C<unpack>:
6761e064 247
ac9dac7f 248 $bin = unpack("B*", pack("N", 3735928559));
6761e064 249
ac9dac7f 250Using C<Bit::Vector>:
6761e064 251
ac9dac7f 252 use Bit::Vector;
253 $vec = Bit::Vector->new_Dec(32, -559038737);
254 $bin = $vec->to_Bin();
6761e064 255
256The remaining transformations (e.g. hex -> oct, bin -> hex, etc.)
257are left as an exercise to the inclined reader.
68dc0745 258
818c4caa 259=back
68dc0745 260
65acb1b1 261=head2 Why doesn't & work the way I want it to?
262
263The behavior of binary arithmetic operators depends on whether they're
264used on numbers or strings. The operators treat a string as a series
265of bits and work with that (the string C<"3"> is the bit pattern
266C<00110011>). The operators work with the binary form of a number
267(the number C<3> is treated as the bit pattern C<00000011>).
268
269So, saying C<11 & 3> performs the "and" operation on numbers (yielding
49d635f9 270C<3>). Saying C<"11" & "3"> performs the "and" operation on strings
65acb1b1 271(yielding C<"1">).
272
273Most problems with C<&> and C<|> arise because the programmer thinks
274they have a number but really it's a string. The rest arise because
275the programmer says:
276
ac9dac7f 277 if ("\020\020" & "\101\101") {
278 # ...
279 }
65acb1b1 280
281but a string consisting of two null bytes (the result of C<"\020\020"
282& "\101\101">) is not a false value in Perl. You need:
283
ac9dac7f 284 if ( ("\020\020" & "\101\101") !~ /[^\000]/) {
285 # ...
286 }
65acb1b1 287
68dc0745 288=head2 How do I multiply matrices?
289
290Use the Math::Matrix or Math::MatrixReal modules (available from CPAN)
291or the PDL extension (also available from CPAN).
292
293=head2 How do I perform an operation on a series of integers?
294
295To call a function on each element in an array, and collect the
296results, use:
297
ac9dac7f 298 @results = map { my_func($_) } @array;
68dc0745 299
300For example:
301
ac9dac7f 302 @triple = map { 3 * $_ } @single;
68dc0745 303
304To call a function on each element of an array, but ignore the
305results:
306
ac9dac7f 307 foreach $iterator (@array) {
308 some_func($iterator);
309 }
68dc0745 310
311To call a function on each integer in a (small) range, you B<can> use:
312
ac9dac7f 313 @results = map { some_func($_) } (5 .. 25);
68dc0745 314
315but you should be aware that the C<..> operator creates an array of
316all integers in the range. This can take a lot of memory for large
317ranges. Instead use:
318
ac9dac7f 319 @results = ();
320 for ($i=5; $i < 500_005; $i++) {
321 push(@results, some_func($i));
322 }
68dc0745 323
87275199 324This situation has been fixed in Perl5.005. Use of C<..> in a C<for>
325loop will iterate over the range, without creating the entire range.
326
ac9dac7f 327 for my $i (5 .. 500_005) {
328 push(@results, some_func($i));
329 }
87275199 330
331will not create a list of 500,000 integers.
332
68dc0745 333=head2 How can I output Roman numerals?
334
a93751fa 335Get the http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-module/Roman module.
68dc0745 336
337=head2 Why aren't my random numbers random?
338
65acb1b1 339If you're using a version of Perl before 5.004, you must call C<srand>
340once at the start of your program to seed the random number generator.
49d635f9 341
5cd0b561 342 BEGIN { srand() if $] < 5.004 }
49d635f9 343
65acb1b1 3445.004 and later automatically call C<srand> at the beginning. Don't
ac9dac7f 345call C<srand> more than once--you make your numbers less random,
346rather than more.
92c2ed05 347
65acb1b1 348Computers are good at being predictable and bad at being random
06a5f41f 349(despite appearances caused by bugs in your programs :-). see the
49d635f9 350F<random> article in the "Far More Than You Ever Wanted To Know"
ac9dac7f 351collection in http://www.cpan.org/misc/olddoc/FMTEYEWTK.tgz , courtesy
352of Tom Phoenix, talks more about this. John von Neumann said, "Anyone
06a5f41f 353who attempts to generate random numbers by deterministic means is, of
b432a672 354course, living in a state of sin."
65acb1b1 355
356If you want numbers that are more random than C<rand> with C<srand>
ac9dac7f 357provides, you should also check out the C<Math::TrulyRandom> module from
65acb1b1 358CPAN. It uses the imperfections in your system's timer to generate
359random numbers, but this takes quite a while. If you want a better
92c2ed05 360pseudorandom generator than comes with your operating system, look at
b432a672 361"Numerical Recipes in C" at http://www.nr.com/ .
68dc0745 362
881bdbd4 363=head2 How do I get a random number between X and Y?
364
ee891a00 365To get a random number between two values, you can use the C<rand()>
366builtin to get a random number between 0 and 1. From there, you shift
367that into the range that you want.
500071f4 368
ee891a00 369C<rand($x)> returns a number such that C<< 0 <= rand($x) < $x >>. Thus
370what you want to have perl figure out is a random number in the range
371from 0 to the difference between your I<X> and I<Y>.
793f5136 372
ee891a00 373That is, to get a number between 10 and 15, inclusive, you want a
374random number between 0 and 5 that you can then add to 10.
793f5136 375
500071f4 376 my $number = 10 + int rand( 15-10+1 );
793f5136 377
378Hence you derive the following simple function to abstract
379that. It selects a random integer between the two given
500071f4 380integers (inclusive), For example: C<random_int_between(50,120)>.
381
ac9dac7f 382 sub random_int_between {
500071f4 383 my($min, $max) = @_;
384 # Assumes that the two arguments are integers themselves!
385 return $min if $min == $max;
386 ($min, $max) = ($max, $min) if $min > $max;
387 return $min + int rand(1 + $max - $min);
388 }
881bdbd4 389
68dc0745 390=head1 Data: Dates
391
5cd0b561 392=head2 How do I find the day or week of the year?
68dc0745 393
571e049f 394The localtime function returns the day of the year. Without an
5cd0b561 395argument localtime uses the current time.
68dc0745 396
a05e4845 397 $day_of_year = (localtime)[7];
ffc145e8 398
ac9dac7f 399The C<POSIX> module can also format a date as the day of the year or
5cd0b561 400week of the year.
68dc0745 401
5cd0b561 402 use POSIX qw/strftime/;
403 my $day_of_year = strftime "%j", localtime;
404 my $week_of_year = strftime "%W", localtime;
405
ac9dac7f 406To get the day of year for any date, use C<POSIX>'s C<mktime> to get
5cd0b561 407a time in epoch seconds for the argument to localtime.
ffc145e8 408
ac9dac7f 409 use POSIX qw/mktime strftime/;
6670e5e7 410 my $week_of_year = strftime "%W",
ac9dac7f 411 localtime( mktime( 0, 0, 0, 18, 11, 87 ) );
5cd0b561 412
ac9dac7f 413The C<Date::Calc> module provides two functions to calculate these.
5cd0b561 414
415 use Date::Calc;
416 my $day_of_year = Day_of_Year( 1987, 12, 18 );
417 my $week_of_year = Week_of_Year( 1987, 12, 18 );
ffc145e8 418
d92eb7b0 419=head2 How do I find the current century or millennium?
420
421Use the following simple functions:
422
ac9dac7f 423 sub get_century {
424 return int((((localtime(shift || time))[5] + 1999))/100);
425 }
6670e5e7 426
ac9dac7f 427 sub get_millennium {
428 return 1+int((((localtime(shift || time))[5] + 1899))/1000);
429 }
d92eb7b0 430
ac9dac7f 431On some systems, the C<POSIX> module's C<strftime()> function has been
432extended in a non-standard way to use a C<%C> format, which they
433sometimes claim is the "century". It isn't, because on most such
434systems, this is only the first two digits of the four-digit year, and
435thus cannot be used to reliably determine the current century or
436millennium.
d92eb7b0 437
92c2ed05 438=head2 How can I compare two dates and find the difference?
68dc0745 439
b68463f7 440(contributed by brian d foy)
441
ac9dac7f 442You could just store all your dates as a number and then subtract.
443Life isn't always that simple though. If you want to work with
444formatted dates, the C<Date::Manip>, C<Date::Calc>, or C<DateTime>
445modules can help you.
68dc0745 446
447=head2 How can I take a string and turn it into epoch seconds?
448
449If it's a regular enough string that it always has the same format,
92c2ed05 450you can split it up and pass the parts to C<timelocal> in the standard
ac9dac7f 451C<Time::Local> module. Otherwise, you should look into the C<Date::Calc>
452and C<Date::Manip> modules from CPAN.
68dc0745 453
454=head2 How can I find the Julian Day?
455
7678cced 456(contributed by brian d foy and Dave Cross)
457
ac9dac7f 458You can use the C<Time::JulianDay> module available on CPAN. Ensure
459that you really want to find a Julian day, though, as many people have
7678cced 460different ideas about Julian days. See
461http://www.hermetic.ch/cal_stud/jdn.htm for instance.
462
ac9dac7f 463You can also try the C<DateTime> module, which can convert a date/time
7678cced 464to a Julian Day.
465
ac9dac7f 466 $ perl -MDateTime -le'print DateTime->today->jd'
467 2453401.5
7678cced 468
469Or the modified Julian Day
470
ac9dac7f 471 $ perl -MDateTime -le'print DateTime->today->mjd'
472 53401
7678cced 473
474Or even the day of the year (which is what some people think of as a
475Julian day)
476
ac9dac7f 477 $ perl -MDateTime -le'print DateTime->today->doy'
478 31
be94a901 479
65acb1b1 480=head2 How do I find yesterday's date?
481
6670e5e7 482(contributed by brian d foy)
49d635f9 483
6670e5e7 484Use one of the Date modules. The C<DateTime> module makes it simple, and
485give you the same time of day, only the day before.
49d635f9 486
6670e5e7 487 use DateTime;
58103a2e 488
6670e5e7 489 my $yesterday = DateTime->now->subtract( days => 1 );
58103a2e 490
6670e5e7 491 print "Yesterday was $yesterday\n";
49d635f9 492
ee891a00 493You can also use the C<Date::Calc> module using its C<Today_and_Now>
6670e5e7 494function.
49d635f9 495
6670e5e7 496 use Date::Calc qw( Today_and_Now Add_Delta_DHMS );
58103a2e 497
6670e5e7 498 my @date_time = Add_Delta_DHMS( Today_and_Now(), -1, 0, 0, 0 );
58103a2e 499
ee891a00 500 print "@date_time\n";
58103a2e 501
6670e5e7 502Most people try to use the time rather than the calendar to figure out
503dates, but that assumes that days are twenty-four hours each. For
504most people, there are two days a year when they aren't: the switch to
505and from summer time throws this off. Let the modules do the work.
d92eb7b0 506
ac9dac7f 507=head2 Does Perl have a Year 2000 problem? Is Perl Y2K compliant?
68dc0745 508
65acb1b1 509Short answer: No, Perl does not have a Year 2000 problem. Yes, Perl is
ac9dac7f 510Y2K compliant (whatever that means). The programmers you've hired to
65acb1b1 511use it, however, probably are not.
512
513Long answer: The question belies a true understanding of the issue.
514Perl is just as Y2K compliant as your pencil--no more, and no less.
515Can you use your pencil to write a non-Y2K-compliant memo? Of course
516you can. Is that the pencil's fault? Of course it isn't.
92c2ed05 517
87275199 518The date and time functions supplied with Perl (gmtime and localtime)
65acb1b1 519supply adequate information to determine the year well beyond 2000
520(2038 is when trouble strikes for 32-bit machines). The year returned
90fdbbb7 521by these functions when used in a list context is the year minus 1900.
65acb1b1 522For years between 1910 and 1999 this I<happens> to be a 2-digit decimal
523number. To avoid the year 2000 problem simply do not treat the year as
524a 2-digit number. It isn't.
68dc0745 525
5a964f20 526When gmtime() and localtime() are used in scalar context they return
68dc0745 527a timestamp string that contains a fully-expanded year. For example,
528C<$timestamp = gmtime(1005613200)> sets $timestamp to "Tue Nov 13 01:00:00
5292001". There's no year 2000 problem here.
530
5a964f20 531That doesn't mean that Perl can't be used to create non-Y2K compliant
532programs. It can. But so can your pencil. It's the fault of the user,
b432a672 533not the language. At the risk of inflaming the NRA: "Perl doesn't
534break Y2K, people do." See http://www.perl.org/about/y2k.html for
5a964f20 535a longer exposition.
536
68dc0745 537=head1 Data: Strings
538
539=head2 How do I validate input?
540
6670e5e7 541(contributed by brian d foy)
542
543There are many ways to ensure that values are what you expect or
544want to accept. Besides the specific examples that we cover in the
545perlfaq, you can also look at the modules with "Assert" and "Validate"
546in their names, along with other modules such as C<Regexp::Common>.
547
548Some modules have validation for particular types of input, such
549as C<Business::ISBN>, C<Business::CreditCard>, C<Email::Valid>,
550and C<Data::Validate::IP>.
68dc0745 551
552=head2 How do I unescape a string?
553
b432a672 554It depends just what you mean by "escape". URL escapes are dealt
92c2ed05 555with in L<perlfaq9>. Shell escapes with the backslash (C<\>)
a6dd486b 556character are removed with
68dc0745 557
ac9dac7f 558 s/\\(.)/$1/g;
68dc0745 559
92c2ed05 560This won't expand C<"\n"> or C<"\t"> or any other special escapes.
68dc0745 561
562=head2 How do I remove consecutive pairs of characters?
563
6670e5e7 564(contributed by brian d foy)
565
566You can use the substitution operator to find pairs of characters (or
567runs of characters) and replace them with a single instance. In this
568substitution, we find a character in C<(.)>. The memory parentheses
569store the matched character in the back-reference C<\1> and we use
570that to require that the same thing immediately follow it. We replace
571that part of the string with the character in C<$1>.
68dc0745 572
ac9dac7f 573 s/(.)\1/$1/g;
d92eb7b0 574
6670e5e7 575We can also use the transliteration operator, C<tr///>. In this
576example, the search list side of our C<tr///> contains nothing, but
577the C<c> option complements that so it contains everything. The
578replacement list also contains nothing, so the transliteration is
579almost a no-op since it won't do any replacements (or more exactly,
580replace the character with itself). However, the C<s> option squashes
581duplicated and consecutive characters in the string so a character
582does not show up next to itself
d92eb7b0 583
6670e5e7 584 my $str = 'Haarlem'; # in the Netherlands
ac9dac7f 585 $str =~ tr///cs; # Now Harlem, like in New York
68dc0745 586
587=head2 How do I expand function calls in a string?
588
6670e5e7 589(contributed by brian d foy)
590
591This is documented in L<perlref>, and although it's not the easiest
592thing to read, it does work. In each of these examples, we call the
58103a2e 593function inside the braces used to dereference a reference. If we
5ae37c3f 594have more than one return value, we can construct and dereference an
6670e5e7 595anonymous array. In this case, we call the function in list context.
596
58103a2e 597 print "The time values are @{ [localtime] }.\n";
6670e5e7 598
599If we want to call the function in scalar context, we have to do a bit
600more work. We can really have any code we like inside the braces, so
601we simply have to end with the scalar reference, although how you do
e573f903 602that is up to you, and you can use code inside the braces. Note that
603the use of parens creates a list context, so we need C<scalar> to
604force the scalar context on the function:
68dc0745 605
6670e5e7 606 print "The time is ${\(scalar localtime)}.\n"
58103a2e 607
6670e5e7 608 print "The time is ${ my $x = localtime; \$x }.\n";
58103a2e 609
6670e5e7 610If your function already returns a reference, you don't need to create
611the reference yourself.
612
613 sub timestamp { my $t = localtime; \$t }
58103a2e 614
6670e5e7 615 print "The time is ${ timestamp() }.\n";
58103a2e 616
617The C<Interpolation> module can also do a lot of magic for you. You can
618specify a variable name, in this case C<E>, to set up a tied hash that
619does the interpolation for you. It has several other methods to do this
620as well.
621
622 use Interpolation E => 'eval';
623 print "The time values are $E{localtime()}.\n";
624
625In most cases, it is probably easier to simply use string concatenation,
626which also forces scalar context.
6670e5e7 627
ac9dac7f 628 print "The time is " . localtime() . ".\n";
68dc0745 629
68dc0745 630=head2 How do I find matching/nesting anything?
631
92c2ed05 632This isn't something that can be done in one regular expression, no
633matter how complicated. To find something between two single
634characters, a pattern like C</x([^x]*)x/> will get the intervening
635bits in $1. For multiple ones, then something more like
ac9dac7f 636C</alpha(.*?)omega/> would be needed. But none of these deals with
6670e5e7 637nested patterns. For balanced expressions using C<(>, C<{>, C<[> or
638C<< < >> as delimiters, use the CPAN module Regexp::Common, or see
639L<perlre/(??{ code })>. For other cases, you'll have to write a
640parser.
92c2ed05 641
642If you are serious about writing a parser, there are a number of
6a2af475 643modules or oddities that will make your life a lot easier. There are
ac9dac7f 644the CPAN modules C<Parse::RecDescent>, C<Parse::Yapp>, and
645C<Text::Balanced>; and the C<byacc> program. Starting from perl 5.8
646the C<Text::Balanced> is part of the standard distribution.
68dc0745 647
92c2ed05 648One simple destructive, inside-out approach that you might try is to
649pull out the smallest nesting parts one at a time:
5a964f20 650
ac9dac7f 651 while (s/BEGIN((?:(?!BEGIN)(?!END).)*)END//gs) {
652 # do something with $1
653 }
5a964f20 654
65acb1b1 655A more complicated and sneaky approach is to make Perl's regular
656expression engine do it for you. This is courtesy Dean Inada, and
657rather has the nature of an Obfuscated Perl Contest entry, but it
658really does work:
659
ac9dac7f 660 # $_ contains the string to parse
661 # BEGIN and END are the opening and closing markers for the
662 # nested text.
c47ff5f1 663
ac9dac7f 664 @( = ('(','');
665 @) = (')','');
666 ($re=$_)=~s/((BEGIN)|(END)|.)/$)[!$3]\Q$1\E$([!$2]/gs;
667 @$ = (eval{/$re/},$@!~/unmatched/i);
668 print join("\n",@$[0..$#$]) if( $$[-1] );
65acb1b1 669
68dc0745 670=head2 How do I reverse a string?
671
ac9dac7f 672Use C<reverse()> in scalar context, as documented in
68dc0745 673L<perlfunc/reverse>.
674
ac9dac7f 675 $reversed = reverse $string;
68dc0745 676
677=head2 How do I expand tabs in a string?
678
5a964f20 679You can do it yourself:
68dc0745 680
ac9dac7f 681 1 while $string =~ s/\t+/' ' x (length($&) * 8 - length($`) % 8)/e;
68dc0745 682
ac9dac7f 683Or you can just use the C<Text::Tabs> module (part of the standard Perl
68dc0745 684distribution).
685
ac9dac7f 686 use Text::Tabs;
687 @expanded_lines = expand(@lines_with_tabs);
68dc0745 688
689=head2 How do I reformat a paragraph?
690
ac9dac7f 691Use C<Text::Wrap> (part of the standard Perl distribution):
68dc0745 692
ac9dac7f 693 use Text::Wrap;
694 print wrap("\t", ' ', @paragraphs);
68dc0745 695
ac9dac7f 696The paragraphs you give to C<Text::Wrap> should not contain embedded
697newlines. C<Text::Wrap> doesn't justify the lines (flush-right).
46fc3d4c 698
ac9dac7f 699Or use the CPAN module C<Text::Autoformat>. Formatting files can be
700easily done by making a shell alias, like so:
bc06af74 701
ac9dac7f 702 alias fmt="perl -i -MText::Autoformat -n0777 \
703 -e 'print autoformat $_, {all=>1}' $*"
bc06af74 704
ac9dac7f 705See the documentation for C<Text::Autoformat> to appreciate its many
bc06af74 706capabilities.
707
49d635f9 708=head2 How can I access or change N characters of a string?
68dc0745 709
49d635f9 710You can access the first characters of a string with substr().
711To get the first character, for example, start at position 0
197aec24 712and grab the string of length 1.
68dc0745 713
68dc0745 714
49d635f9 715 $string = "Just another Perl Hacker";
ac9dac7f 716 $first_char = substr( $string, 0, 1 ); # 'J'
68dc0745 717
49d635f9 718To change part of a string, you can use the optional fourth
719argument which is the replacement string.
68dc0745 720
ac9dac7f 721 substr( $string, 13, 4, "Perl 5.8.0" );
197aec24 722
49d635f9 723You can also use substr() as an lvalue.
68dc0745 724
ac9dac7f 725 substr( $string, 13, 4 ) = "Perl 5.8.0";
197aec24 726
68dc0745 727=head2 How do I change the Nth occurrence of something?
728
92c2ed05 729You have to keep track of N yourself. For example, let's say you want
730to change the fifth occurrence of C<"whoever"> or C<"whomever"> into
d92eb7b0 731C<"whosoever"> or C<"whomsoever">, case insensitively. These
732all assume that $_ contains the string to be altered.
68dc0745 733
ac9dac7f 734 $count = 0;
735 s{((whom?)ever)}{
736 ++$count == 5 # is it the 5th?
737 ? "${2}soever" # yes, swap
738 : $1 # renege and leave it there
739 }ige;
68dc0745 740
5a964f20 741In the more general case, you can use the C</g> modifier in a C<while>
742loop, keeping count of matches.
743
ac9dac7f 744 $WANT = 3;
745 $count = 0;
746 $_ = "One fish two fish red fish blue fish";
747 while (/(\w+)\s+fish\b/gi) {
748 if (++$count == $WANT) {
749 print "The third fish is a $1 one.\n";
750 }
751 }
5a964f20 752
92c2ed05 753That prints out: C<"The third fish is a red one."> You can also use a
5a964f20 754repetition count and repeated pattern like this:
755
ac9dac7f 756 /(?:\w+\s+fish\s+){2}(\w+)\s+fish/i;
5a964f20 757
68dc0745 758=head2 How can I count the number of occurrences of a substring within a string?
759
a6dd486b 760There are a number of ways, with varying efficiency. If you want a
68dc0745 761count of a certain single character (X) within a string, you can use the
762C<tr///> function like so:
763
ac9dac7f 764 $string = "ThisXlineXhasXsomeXx'sXinXit";
765 $count = ($string =~ tr/X//);
766 print "There are $count X characters in the string";
68dc0745 767
768This is fine if you are just looking for a single character. However,
769if you are trying to count multiple character substrings within a
770larger string, C<tr///> won't work. What you can do is wrap a while()
771loop around a global pattern match. For example, let's count negative
772integers:
773
ac9dac7f 774 $string = "-9 55 48 -2 23 -76 4 14 -44";
775 while ($string =~ /-\d+/g) { $count++ }
776 print "There are $count negative numbers in the string";
68dc0745 777
881bdbd4 778Another version uses a global match in list context, then assigns the
779result to a scalar, producing a count of the number of matches.
780
781 $count = () = $string =~ /-\d+/g;
782
68dc0745 783=head2 How do I capitalize all the words on one line?
784
785To make the first letter of each word upper case:
3fe9a6f1 786
ac9dac7f 787 $line =~ s/\b(\w)/\U$1/g;
68dc0745 788
46fc3d4c 789This has the strange effect of turning "C<don't do it>" into "C<Don'T
a6dd486b 790Do It>". Sometimes you might want this. Other times you might need a
24f1ba9b 791more thorough solution (Suggested by brian d foy):
46fc3d4c 792
ac9dac7f 793 $string =~ s/ (
794 (^\w) #at the beginning of the line
795 | # or
796 (\s\w) #preceded by whitespace
797 )
798 /\U$1/xg;
799
800 $string =~ s/([\w']+)/\u\L$1/g;
46fc3d4c 801
68dc0745 802To make the whole line upper case:
3fe9a6f1 803
ac9dac7f 804 $line = uc($line);
68dc0745 805
806To force each word to be lower case, with the first letter upper case:
3fe9a6f1 807
ac9dac7f 808 $line =~ s/(\w+)/\u\L$1/g;
68dc0745 809
5a964f20 810You can (and probably should) enable locale awareness of those
811characters by placing a C<use locale> pragma in your program.
92c2ed05 812See L<perllocale> for endless details on locales.
5a964f20 813
65acb1b1 814This is sometimes referred to as putting something into "title
d92eb7b0 815case", but that's not quite accurate. Consider the proper
65acb1b1 816capitalization of the movie I<Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to
817Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb>, for example.
818
369b44b4 819Damian Conway's L<Text::Autoformat> module provides some smart
820case transformations:
821
ac9dac7f 822 use Text::Autoformat;
823 my $x = "Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop ".
824 "Worrying and Love the Bomb";
369b44b4 825
ac9dac7f 826 print $x, "\n";
827 for my $style (qw( sentence title highlight )) {
828 print autoformat($x, { case => $style }), "\n";
829 }
369b44b4 830
49d635f9 831=head2 How can I split a [character] delimited string except when inside [character]?
68dc0745 832
ac9dac7f 833Several modules can handle this sort of parsing--C<Text::Balanced>,
834C<Text::CSV>, C<Text::CSV_XS>, and C<Text::ParseWords>, among others.
49d635f9 835
836Take the example case of trying to split a string that is
837comma-separated into its different fields. You can't use C<split(/,/)>
838because you shouldn't split if the comma is inside quotes. For
839example, take a data line like this:
68dc0745 840
ac9dac7f 841 SAR001,"","Cimetrix, Inc","Bob Smith","CAM",N,8,1,0,7,"Error, Core Dumped"
68dc0745 842
843Due to the restriction of the quotes, this is a fairly complex
197aec24 844problem. Thankfully, we have Jeffrey Friedl, author of
49d635f9 845I<Mastering Regular Expressions>, to handle these for us. He
ac9dac7f 846suggests (assuming your string is contained in C<$text>):
68dc0745 847
ac9dac7f 848 @new = ();
849 push(@new, $+) while $text =~ m{
850 "([^\"\\]*(?:\\.[^\"\\]*)*)",? # groups the phrase inside the quotes
851 | ([^,]+),?
852 | ,
853 }gx;
854 push(@new, undef) if substr($text,-1,1) eq ',';
68dc0745 855
46fc3d4c 856If you want to represent quotation marks inside a
857quotation-mark-delimited field, escape them with backslashes (eg,
49d635f9 858C<"like \"this\"">.
46fc3d4c 859
ac9dac7f 860Alternatively, the C<Text::ParseWords> module (part of the standard
861Perl distribution) lets you say:
68dc0745 862
ac9dac7f 863 use Text::ParseWords;
864 @new = quotewords(",", 0, $text);
65acb1b1 865
68dc0745 866=head2 How do I strip blank space from the beginning/end of a string?
867
6670e5e7 868(contributed by brian d foy)
68dc0745 869
6670e5e7 870A substitution can do this for you. For a single line, you want to
871replace all the leading or trailing whitespace with nothing. You
872can do that with a pair of substitutions.
68dc0745 873
6670e5e7 874 s/^\s+//;
875 s/\s+$//;
68dc0745 876
6670e5e7 877You can also write that as a single substitution, although it turns
878out the combined statement is slower than the separate ones. That
879might not matter to you, though.
68dc0745 880
6670e5e7 881 s/^\s+|\s+$//g;
68dc0745 882
6670e5e7 883In this regular expression, the alternation matches either at the
884beginning or the end of the string since the anchors have a lower
885precedence than the alternation. With the C</g> flag, the substitution
886makes all possible matches, so it gets both. Remember, the trailing
887newline matches the C<\s+>, and the C<$> anchor can match to the
888physical end of the string, so the newline disappears too. Just add
889the newline to the output, which has the added benefit of preserving
890"blank" (consisting entirely of whitespace) lines which the C<^\s+>
891would remove all by itself.
68dc0745 892
6670e5e7 893 while( <> )
894 {
895 s/^\s+|\s+$//g;
896 print "$_\n";
897 }
5a964f20 898
6670e5e7 899For a multi-line string, you can apply the regular expression
900to each logical line in the string by adding the C</m> flag (for
901"multi-line"). With the C</m> flag, the C<$> matches I<before> an
902embedded newline, so it doesn't remove it. It still removes the
903newline at the end of the string.
904
ac9dac7f 905 $string =~ s/^\s+|\s+$//gm;
6670e5e7 906
907Remember that lines consisting entirely of whitespace will disappear,
908since the first part of the alternation can match the entire string
909and replace it with nothing. If need to keep embedded blank lines,
910you have to do a little more work. Instead of matching any whitespace
911(since that includes a newline), just match the other whitespace.
912
913 $string =~ s/^[\t\f ]+|[\t\f ]+$//mg;
5a964f20 914
65acb1b1 915=head2 How do I pad a string with blanks or pad a number with zeroes?
916
65acb1b1 917In the following examples, C<$pad_len> is the length to which you wish
d92eb7b0 918to pad the string, C<$text> or C<$num> contains the string to be padded,
919and C<$pad_char> contains the padding character. You can use a single
920character string constant instead of the C<$pad_char> variable if you
921know what it is in advance. And in the same way you can use an integer in
922place of C<$pad_len> if you know the pad length in advance.
65acb1b1 923
d92eb7b0 924The simplest method uses the C<sprintf> function. It can pad on the left
925or right with blanks and on the left with zeroes and it will not
926truncate the result. The C<pack> function can only pad strings on the
927right with blanks and it will truncate the result to a maximum length of
928C<$pad_len>.
65acb1b1 929
ac9dac7f 930 # Left padding a string with blanks (no truncation):
04d666b1 931 $padded = sprintf("%${pad_len}s", $text);
932 $padded = sprintf("%*s", $pad_len, $text); # same thing
65acb1b1 933
ac9dac7f 934 # Right padding a string with blanks (no truncation):
04d666b1 935 $padded = sprintf("%-${pad_len}s", $text);
936 $padded = sprintf("%-*s", $pad_len, $text); # same thing
65acb1b1 937
ac9dac7f 938 # Left padding a number with 0 (no truncation):
04d666b1 939 $padded = sprintf("%0${pad_len}d", $num);
940 $padded = sprintf("%0*d", $pad_len, $num); # same thing
65acb1b1 941
ac9dac7f 942 # Right padding a string with blanks using pack (will truncate):
943 $padded = pack("A$pad_len",$text);
65acb1b1 944
d92eb7b0 945If you need to pad with a character other than blank or zero you can use
946one of the following methods. They all generate a pad string with the
947C<x> operator and combine that with C<$text>. These methods do
948not truncate C<$text>.
65acb1b1 949
d92eb7b0 950Left and right padding with any character, creating a new string:
65acb1b1 951
ac9dac7f 952 $padded = $pad_char x ( $pad_len - length( $text ) ) . $text;
953 $padded = $text . $pad_char x ( $pad_len - length( $text ) );
65acb1b1 954
d92eb7b0 955Left and right padding with any character, modifying C<$text> directly:
65acb1b1 956
ac9dac7f 957 substr( $text, 0, 0 ) = $pad_char x ( $pad_len - length( $text ) );
958 $text .= $pad_char x ( $pad_len - length( $text ) );
65acb1b1 959
68dc0745 960=head2 How do I extract selected columns from a string?
961
e573f903 962(contributed by brian d foy)
963
964If you know where the columns that contain the data, you can
965use C<substr> to extract a single column.
966
967 my $column = substr( $line, $start_column, $length );
968
969You can use C<split> if the columns are separated by whitespace or
970some other delimiter, as long as whitespace or the delimiter cannot
971appear as part of the data.
972
973 my $line = ' fred barney betty ';
974 my @columns = split /\s+/, $line;
975 # ( '', 'fred', 'barney', 'betty' );
976
977 my $line = 'fred||barney||betty';
978 my @columns = split /\|/, $line;
979 # ( 'fred', '', 'barney', '', 'betty' );
980
981If you want to work with comma-separated values, don't do this since
982that format is a bit more complicated. Use one of the modules that
983handle that fornat, such as C<Text::CSV>, C<Text::CSV_XS>, or
984C<Text::CSV_PP>.
985
986If you want to break apart an entire line of fixed columns, you can use
987C<unpack> with the A (ASCII) format. by using a number after the format
988specifier, you can denote the column width. See the C<pack> and C<unpack>
989entries in L<perlfunc> for more details.
990
991 my @fields = unpack( $line, "A8 A8 A8 A16 A4" );
992
993Note that spaces in the format argument to C<unpack> do not denote literal
994spaces. If you have space separated data, you may want C<split> instead.
68dc0745 995
996=head2 How do I find the soundex value of a string?
997
7678cced 998(contributed by brian d foy)
999
1000You can use the Text::Soundex module. If you want to do fuzzy or close
ac9dac7f 1001matching, you might also try the C<String::Approx>, and
1002C<Text::Metaphone>, and C<Text::DoubleMetaphone> modules.
68dc0745 1003
1004=head2 How can I expand variables in text strings?
1005
e573f903 1006(contributed by brian d foy)
5a964f20 1007
322be77c 1008If you can avoid it, don't, or if you can use a templating system,
c195e131 1009such as C<Text::Template> or C<Template> Toolkit, do that instead. You
1010might even be able to get the job done with C<sprintf> or C<printf>:
1011
1012 my $string = sprintf 'Say hello to %s and %s', $foo, $bar;
322be77c 1013
1014However, for the one-off simple case where I don't want to pull out a
1015full templating system, I'll use a string that has two Perl scalar
1016variables in it. In this example, I want to expand C<$foo> and C<$bar>
c195e131 1017to their variable's values:
e573f903 1018
1019 my $foo = 'Fred';
1020 my $bar = 'Barney';
1021 $string = 'Say hello to $foo and $bar';
1022
1023One way I can do this involves the substitution operator and a double
1024C</e> flag. The first C</e> evaluates C<$1> on the replacement side and
1025turns it into C<$foo>. The second /e starts with C<$foo> and replaces
1026it with its value. C<$foo>, then, turns into 'Fred', and that's finally
c195e131 1027what's left in the string:
e573f903 1028
1029 $string =~ s/(\$\w+)/$1/eeg; # 'Say hello to Fred and Barney'
322be77c 1030
e573f903 1031The C</e> will also silently ignore violations of strict, replacing
c195e131 1032undefined variable names with the empty string. Since I'm using the
1033C</e> flag (twice even!), I have all of the same security problems I
1034have with C<eval> in its string form. If there's something odd in
1035C<$foo>, perhaps something like C<@{[ system "rm -rf /" ]}>, then
1036I could get myself in trouble.
1037
1038To get around the security problem, I could also pull the values from
1039a hash instead of evaluating variable names. Using a single C</e>, I
1040can check the hash to ensure the value exists, and if it doesn't, I
1041can replace the missing value with a marker, in this case C<???> to
1042signal that I missed something:
e573f903 1043
1044 my $string = 'This has $foo and $bar';
1045
1046 my %Replacements = (
1047 foo => 'Fred',
ac9dac7f 1048 );
322be77c 1049
e573f903 1050 # $string =~ s/\$(\w+)/$Replacements{$1}/g;
1051 $string =~ s/\$(\w+)/
1052 exists $Replacements{$1} ? $Replacements{$1} : '???'
1053 /eg;
322be77c 1054
e573f903 1055 print $string;
322be77c 1056
68dc0745 1057=head2 What's wrong with always quoting "$vars"?
1058
ac9dac7f 1059The problem is that those double-quotes force
e573f903 1060stringification--coercing numbers and references into strings--even
1061when you don't want them to be strings. Think of it this way:
1062double-quote expansion is used to produce new strings. If you already
1063have a string, why do you need more?
68dc0745 1064
1065If you get used to writing odd things like these:
1066
ac9dac7f 1067 print "$var"; # BAD
1068 $new = "$old"; # BAD
1069 somefunc("$var"); # BAD
68dc0745 1070
1071You'll be in trouble. Those should (in 99.8% of the cases) be
1072the simpler and more direct:
1073
ac9dac7f 1074 print $var;
1075 $new = $old;
1076 somefunc($var);
68dc0745 1077
1078Otherwise, besides slowing you down, you're going to break code when
1079the thing in the scalar is actually neither a string nor a number, but
1080a reference:
1081
ac9dac7f 1082 func(\@array);
1083 sub func {
1084 my $aref = shift;
1085 my $oref = "$aref"; # WRONG
1086 }
68dc0745 1087
1088You can also get into subtle problems on those few operations in Perl
1089that actually do care about the difference between a string and a
1090number, such as the magical C<++> autoincrement operator or the
1091syscall() function.
1092
197aec24 1093Stringification also destroys arrays.
5a964f20 1094
ac9dac7f 1095 @lines = `command`;
1096 print "@lines"; # WRONG - extra blanks
1097 print @lines; # right
5a964f20 1098
04d666b1 1099=head2 Why don't my E<lt>E<lt>HERE documents work?
68dc0745 1100
1101Check for these three things:
1102
1103=over 4
1104
04d666b1 1105=item There must be no space after the E<lt>E<lt> part.
68dc0745 1106
197aec24 1107=item There (probably) should be a semicolon at the end.
68dc0745 1108
197aec24 1109=item You can't (easily) have any space in front of the tag.
68dc0745 1110
1111=back
1112
197aec24 1113If you want to indent the text in the here document, you
5a964f20 1114can do this:
1115
1116 # all in one
1117 ($VAR = <<HERE_TARGET) =~ s/^\s+//gm;
1118 your text
1119 goes here
1120 HERE_TARGET
1121
1122But the HERE_TARGET must still be flush against the margin.
197aec24 1123If you want that indented also, you'll have to quote
5a964f20 1124in the indentation.
1125
1126 ($quote = <<' FINIS') =~ s/^\s+//gm;
1127 ...we will have peace, when you and all your works have
1128 perished--and the works of your dark master to whom you
1129 would deliver us. You are a liar, Saruman, and a corrupter
1130 of men's hearts. --Theoden in /usr/src/perl/taint.c
1131 FINIS
83ded9ee 1132 $quote =~ s/\s+--/\n--/;
5a964f20 1133
1134A nice general-purpose fixer-upper function for indented here documents
1135follows. It expects to be called with a here document as its argument.
1136It looks to see whether each line begins with a common substring, and
a6dd486b 1137if so, strips that substring off. Otherwise, it takes the amount of leading
1138whitespace found on the first line and removes that much off each
5a964f20 1139subsequent line.
1140
1141 sub fix {
1142 local $_ = shift;
a6dd486b 1143 my ($white, $leader); # common whitespace and common leading string
5a964f20 1144 if (/^\s*(?:([^\w\s]+)(\s*).*\n)(?:\s*\1\2?.*\n)+$/) {
1145 ($white, $leader) = ($2, quotemeta($1));
1146 } else {
1147 ($white, $leader) = (/^(\s+)/, '');
1148 }
1149 s/^\s*?$leader(?:$white)?//gm;
1150 return $_;
1151 }
1152
c8db1d39 1153This works with leading special strings, dynamically determined:
5a964f20 1154
ac9dac7f 1155 $remember_the_main = fix<<' MAIN_INTERPRETER_LOOP';
5a964f20 1156 @@@ int
1157 @@@ runops() {
1158 @@@ SAVEI32(runlevel);
1159 @@@ runlevel++;
d92eb7b0 1160 @@@ while ( op = (*op->op_ppaddr)() );
5a964f20 1161 @@@ TAINT_NOT;
1162 @@@ return 0;
1163 @@@ }
ac9dac7f 1164 MAIN_INTERPRETER_LOOP
5a964f20 1165
a6dd486b 1166Or with a fixed amount of leading whitespace, with remaining
5a964f20 1167indentation correctly preserved:
1168
ac9dac7f 1169 $poem = fix<<EVER_ON_AND_ON;
5a964f20 1170 Now far ahead the Road has gone,
1171 And I must follow, if I can,
1172 Pursuing it with eager feet,
1173 Until it joins some larger way
1174 Where many paths and errands meet.
1175 And whither then? I cannot say.
1176 --Bilbo in /usr/src/perl/pp_ctl.c
ac9dac7f 1177 EVER_ON_AND_ON
5a964f20 1178
68dc0745 1179=head1 Data: Arrays
1180
65acb1b1 1181=head2 What is the difference between a list and an array?
1182
ac9dac7f 1183An array has a changeable length. A list does not. An array is
1184something you can push or pop, while a list is a set of values. Some
1185people make the distinction that a list is a value while an array is a
1186variable. Subroutines are passed and return lists, you put things into
1187list context, you initialize arrays with lists, and you C<foreach()>
1188across a list. C<@> variables are arrays, anonymous arrays are
1189arrays, arrays in scalar context behave like the number of elements in
1190them, subroutines access their arguments through the array C<@_>, and
1191C<push>/C<pop>/C<shift> only work on arrays.
65acb1b1 1192
1193As a side note, there's no such thing as a list in scalar context.
1194When you say
1195
ac9dac7f 1196 $scalar = (2, 5, 7, 9);
65acb1b1 1197
d92eb7b0 1198you're using the comma operator in scalar context, so it uses the scalar
ac9dac7f 1199comma operator. There never was a list there at all! This causes the
d92eb7b0 1200last value to be returned: 9.
65acb1b1 1201
68dc0745 1202=head2 What is the difference between $array[1] and @array[1]?
1203
a6dd486b 1204The former is a scalar value; the latter an array slice, making
68dc0745 1205it a list with one (scalar) value. You should use $ when you want a
1206scalar value (most of the time) and @ when you want a list with one
1207scalar value in it (very, very rarely; nearly never, in fact).
1208
1209Sometimes it doesn't make a difference, but sometimes it does.
1210For example, compare:
1211
ac9dac7f 1212 $good[0] = `some program that outputs several lines`;
68dc0745 1213
1214with
1215
ac9dac7f 1216 @bad[0] = `same program that outputs several lines`;
68dc0745 1217
197aec24 1218The C<use warnings> pragma and the B<-w> flag will warn you about these
9f1b1f2d 1219matters.
68dc0745 1220
d92eb7b0 1221=head2 How can I remove duplicate elements from a list or array?
68dc0745 1222
6670e5e7 1223(contributed by brian d foy)
68dc0745 1224
6670e5e7 1225Use a hash. When you think the words "unique" or "duplicated", think
1226"hash keys".
68dc0745 1227
6670e5e7 1228If you don't care about the order of the elements, you could just
1229create the hash then extract the keys. It's not important how you
1230create that hash: just that you use C<keys> to get the unique
1231elements.
551e1d92 1232
ac9dac7f 1233 my %hash = map { $_, 1 } @array;
1234 # or a hash slice: @hash{ @array } = ();
1235 # or a foreach: $hash{$_} = 1 foreach ( @array );
1236
1237 my @unique = keys %hash;
68dc0745 1238
ac9dac7f 1239If you want to use a module, try the C<uniq> function from
1240C<List::MoreUtils>. In list context it returns the unique elements,
1241preserving their order in the list. In scalar context, it returns the
1242number of unique elements.
1243
1244 use List::MoreUtils qw(uniq);
1245
1246 my @unique = uniq( 1, 2, 3, 4, 4, 5, 6, 5, 7 ); # 1,2,3,4,5,6,7
1247 my $unique = uniq( 1, 2, 3, 4, 4, 5, 6, 5, 7 ); # 7
68dc0745 1248
6670e5e7 1249You can also go through each element and skip the ones you've seen
1250before. Use a hash to keep track. The first time the loop sees an
1251element, that element has no key in C<%Seen>. The C<next> statement
1252creates the key and immediately uses its value, which is C<undef>, so
1253the loop continues to the C<push> and increments the value for that
1254key. The next time the loop sees that same element, its key exists in
1255the hash I<and> the value for that key is true (since it's not 0 or
ac9dac7f 1256C<undef>), so the next skips that iteration and the loop goes to the
1257next element.
551e1d92 1258
6670e5e7 1259 my @unique = ();
1260 my %seen = ();
68dc0745 1261
6670e5e7 1262 foreach my $elem ( @array )
1263 {
1264 next if $seen{ $elem }++;
1265 push @unique, $elem;
1266 }
68dc0745 1267
6670e5e7 1268You can write this more briefly using a grep, which does the
1269same thing.
68dc0745 1270
ac9dac7f 1271 my %seen = ();
1272 my @unique = grep { ! $seen{ $_ }++ } @array;
65acb1b1 1273
ddbc1f16 1274=head2 How can I tell whether a certain element is contained in a list or array?
5a964f20 1275
9e72e4c6 1276(portions of this answer contributed by Anno Siegel)
1277
5a964f20 1278Hearing the word "in" is an I<in>dication that you probably should have
1279used a hash, not a list or array, to store your data. Hashes are
1280designed to answer this question quickly and efficiently. Arrays aren't.
68dc0745 1281
5a964f20 1282That being said, there are several ways to approach this. If you
1283are going to make this query many times over arbitrary string values,
881bdbd4 1284the fastest way is probably to invert the original array and maintain a
1285hash whose keys are the first array's values.
68dc0745 1286
ac9dac7f 1287 @blues = qw/azure cerulean teal turquoise lapis-lazuli/;
1288 %is_blue = ();
1289 for (@blues) { $is_blue{$_} = 1 }
68dc0745 1290
ac9dac7f 1291Now you can check whether C<$is_blue{$some_color}>. It might have
1292been a good idea to keep the blues all in a hash in the first place.
68dc0745 1293
1294If the values are all small integers, you could use a simple indexed
1295array. This kind of an array will take up less space:
1296
ac9dac7f 1297 @primes = (2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31);
1298 @is_tiny_prime = ();
1299 for (@primes) { $is_tiny_prime[$_] = 1 }
1300 # or simply @istiny_prime[@primes] = (1) x @primes;
68dc0745 1301
1302Now you check whether $is_tiny_prime[$some_number].
1303
1304If the values in question are integers instead of strings, you can save
1305quite a lot of space by using bit strings instead:
1306
ac9dac7f 1307 @articles = ( 1..10, 150..2000, 2017 );
1308 undef $read;
1309 for (@articles) { vec($read,$_,1) = 1 }
68dc0745 1310
1311Now check whether C<vec($read,$n,1)> is true for some C<$n>.
1312
9e72e4c6 1313These methods guarantee fast individual tests but require a re-organization
1314of the original list or array. They only pay off if you have to test
1315multiple values against the same array.
68dc0745 1316
ac9dac7f 1317If you are testing only once, the standard module C<List::Util> exports
9e72e4c6 1318the function C<first> for this purpose. It works by stopping once it
c195e131 1319finds the element. It's written in C for speed, and its Perl equivalent
9e72e4c6 1320looks like this subroutine:
68dc0745 1321
9e72e4c6 1322 sub first (&@) {
1323 my $code = shift;
1324 foreach (@_) {
1325 return $_ if &{$code}();
1326 }
1327 undef;
1328 }
68dc0745 1329
9e72e4c6 1330If speed is of little concern, the common idiom uses grep in scalar context
1331(which returns the number of items that passed its condition) to traverse the
1332entire list. This does have the benefit of telling you how many matches it
1333found, though.
68dc0745 1334
9e72e4c6 1335 my $is_there = grep $_ eq $whatever, @array;
65acb1b1 1336
9e72e4c6 1337If you want to actually extract the matching elements, simply use grep in
1338list context.
68dc0745 1339
9e72e4c6 1340 my @matches = grep $_ eq $whatever, @array;
58103a2e 1341
68dc0745 1342=head2 How do I compute the difference of two arrays? How do I compute the intersection of two arrays?
1343
ac9dac7f 1344Use a hash. Here's code to do both and more. It assumes that each
1345element is unique in a given array:
68dc0745 1346
ac9dac7f 1347 @union = @intersection = @difference = ();
1348 %count = ();
1349 foreach $element (@array1, @array2) { $count{$element}++ }
1350 foreach $element (keys %count) {
1351 push @union, $element;
1352 push @{ $count{$element} > 1 ? \@intersection : \@difference }, $element;
1353 }
68dc0745 1354
ac9dac7f 1355Note that this is the I<symmetric difference>, that is, all elements
1356in either A or in B but not in both. Think of it as an xor operation.
d92eb7b0 1357
65acb1b1 1358=head2 How do I test whether two arrays or hashes are equal?
1359
ac9dac7f 1360The following code works for single-level arrays. It uses a
1361stringwise comparison, and does not distinguish defined versus
1362undefined empty strings. Modify if you have other needs.
65acb1b1 1363
ac9dac7f 1364 $are_equal = compare_arrays(\@frogs, \@toads);
65acb1b1 1365
ac9dac7f 1366 sub compare_arrays {
1367 my ($first, $second) = @_;
1368 no warnings; # silence spurious -w undef complaints
1369 return 0 unless @$first == @$second;
1370 for (my $i = 0; $i < @$first; $i++) {
1371 return 0 if $first->[$i] ne $second->[$i];
1372 }
1373 return 1;
1374 }
65acb1b1 1375
1376For multilevel structures, you may wish to use an approach more
ac9dac7f 1377like this one. It uses the CPAN module C<FreezeThaw>:
65acb1b1 1378
ac9dac7f 1379 use FreezeThaw qw(cmpStr);
1380 @a = @b = ( "this", "that", [ "more", "stuff" ] );
65acb1b1 1381
ac9dac7f 1382 printf "a and b contain %s arrays\n",
1383 cmpStr(\@a, \@b) == 0
1384 ? "the same"
1385 : "different";
65acb1b1 1386
ac9dac7f 1387This approach also works for comparing hashes. Here we'll demonstrate
1388two different answers:
65acb1b1 1389
ac9dac7f 1390 use FreezeThaw qw(cmpStr cmpStrHard);
65acb1b1 1391
ac9dac7f 1392 %a = %b = ( "this" => "that", "extra" => [ "more", "stuff" ] );
1393 $a{EXTRA} = \%b;
1394 $b{EXTRA} = \%a;
65acb1b1 1395
ac9dac7f 1396 printf "a and b contain %s hashes\n",
65acb1b1 1397 cmpStr(\%a, \%b) == 0 ? "the same" : "different";
1398
ac9dac7f 1399 printf "a and b contain %s hashes\n",
65acb1b1 1400 cmpStrHard(\%a, \%b) == 0 ? "the same" : "different";
1401
1402
1403The first reports that both those the hashes contain the same data,
1404while the second reports that they do not. Which you prefer is left as
1405an exercise to the reader.
1406
68dc0745 1407=head2 How do I find the first array element for which a condition is true?
1408
49d635f9 1409To find the first array element which satisfies a condition, you can
ac9dac7f 1410use the C<first()> function in the C<List::Util> module, which comes
1411with Perl 5.8. This example finds the first element that contains
1412"Perl".
49d635f9 1413
1414 use List::Util qw(first);
197aec24 1415
49d635f9 1416 my $element = first { /Perl/ } @array;
197aec24 1417
ac9dac7f 1418If you cannot use C<List::Util>, you can make your own loop to do the
49d635f9 1419same thing. Once you find the element, you stop the loop with last.
1420
1421 my $found;
ac9dac7f 1422 foreach ( @array ) {
6670e5e7 1423 if( /Perl/ ) { $found = $_; last }
49d635f9 1424 }
1425
1426If you want the array index, you can iterate through the indices
1427and check the array element at each index until you find one
1428that satisfies the condition.
1429
197aec24 1430 my( $found, $index ) = ( undef, -1 );
ac9dac7f 1431 for( $i = 0; $i < @array; $i++ ) {
1432 if( $array[$i] =~ /Perl/ ) {
6670e5e7 1433 $found = $array[$i];
1434 $index = $i;
1435 last;
1436 }
1437 }
68dc0745 1438
1439=head2 How do I handle linked lists?
1440
1441In general, you usually don't need a linked list in Perl, since with
ac9dac7f 1442regular arrays, you can push and pop or shift and unshift at either
1443end, or you can use splice to add and/or remove arbitrary number of
ac003c96 1444elements at arbitrary points. Both pop and shift are O(1)
ac9dac7f 1445operations on Perl's dynamic arrays. In the absence of shifts and
1446pops, push in general needs to reallocate on the order every log(N)
1447times, and unshift will need to copy pointers each time.
68dc0745 1448
1449If you really, really wanted, you could use structures as described in
ac9dac7f 1450L<perldsc> or L<perltoot> and do just what the algorithm book tells
1451you to do. For example, imagine a list node like this:
65acb1b1 1452
ac9dac7f 1453 $node = {
1454 VALUE => 42,
1455 LINK => undef,
1456 };
65acb1b1 1457
1458You could walk the list this way:
1459
ac9dac7f 1460 print "List: ";
1461 for ($node = $head; $node; $node = $node->{LINK}) {
1462 print $node->{VALUE}, " ";
1463 }
1464 print "\n";
65acb1b1 1465
a6dd486b 1466You could add to the list this way:
65acb1b1 1467
ac9dac7f 1468 my ($head, $tail);
1469 $tail = append($head, 1); # grow a new head
1470 for $value ( 2 .. 10 ) {
1471 $tail = append($tail, $value);
1472 }
65acb1b1 1473
ac9dac7f 1474 sub append {
1475 my($list, $value) = @_;
1476 my $node = { VALUE => $value };
1477 if ($list) {
1478 $node->{LINK} = $list->{LINK};
1479 $list->{LINK} = $node;
1480 }
1481 else {
1482 $_[0] = $node; # replace caller's version
1483 }
1484 return $node;
1485 }
65acb1b1 1486
1487But again, Perl's built-in are virtually always good enough.
68dc0745 1488
1489=head2 How do I handle circular lists?
1490
1491Circular lists could be handled in the traditional fashion with linked
1492lists, or you could just do something like this with an array:
1493
ac9dac7f 1494 unshift(@array, pop(@array)); # the last shall be first
1495 push(@array, shift(@array)); # and vice versa
1496
1497You can also use C<Tie::Cycle>:
1498
1499 use Tie::Cycle;
1500
1501 tie my $cycle, 'Tie::Cycle', [ qw( FFFFFF 000000 FFFF00 ) ];
1502
1503 print $cycle; # FFFFFF
1504 print $cycle; # 000000
1505 print $cycle; # FFFF00
68dc0745 1506
1507=head2 How do I shuffle an array randomly?
1508
45bbf655 1509If you either have Perl 5.8.0 or later installed, or if you have
1510Scalar-List-Utils 1.03 or later installed, you can say:
1511
ac9dac7f 1512 use List::Util 'shuffle';
45bbf655 1513
1514 @shuffled = shuffle(@list);
1515
f05bbc40 1516If not, you can use a Fisher-Yates shuffle.
5a964f20 1517
ac9dac7f 1518 sub fisher_yates_shuffle {
1519 my $deck = shift; # $deck is a reference to an array
1520 my $i = @$deck;
1521 while (--$i) {
1522 my $j = int rand ($i+1);
1523 @$deck[$i,$j] = @$deck[$j,$i];
1524 }
1525 }
5a964f20 1526
ac9dac7f 1527 # shuffle my mpeg collection
1528 #
1529 my @mpeg = <audio/*/*.mp3>;
1530 fisher_yates_shuffle( \@mpeg ); # randomize @mpeg in place
1531 print @mpeg;
5a964f20 1532
45bbf655 1533Note that the above implementation shuffles an array in place,
ac9dac7f 1534unlike the C<List::Util::shuffle()> which takes a list and returns
45bbf655 1535a new shuffled list.
1536
d92eb7b0 1537You've probably seen shuffling algorithms that work using splice,
a6dd486b 1538randomly picking another element to swap the current element with
68dc0745 1539
ac9dac7f 1540 srand;
1541 @new = ();
1542 @old = 1 .. 10; # just a demo
1543 while (@old) {
1544 push(@new, splice(@old, rand @old, 1));
1545 }
68dc0745 1546
ac9dac7f 1547This is bad because splice is already O(N), and since you do it N
1548times, you just invented a quadratic algorithm; that is, O(N**2).
1549This does not scale, although Perl is so efficient that you probably
1550won't notice this until you have rather largish arrays.
68dc0745 1551
1552=head2 How do I process/modify each element of an array?
1553
1554Use C<for>/C<foreach>:
1555
ac9dac7f 1556 for (@lines) {
6670e5e7 1557 s/foo/bar/; # change that word
1558 tr/XZ/ZX/; # swap those letters
ac9dac7f 1559 }
68dc0745 1560
1561Here's another; let's compute spherical volumes:
1562
ac9dac7f 1563 for (@volumes = @radii) { # @volumes has changed parts
6670e5e7 1564 $_ **= 3;
1565 $_ *= (4/3) * 3.14159; # this will be constant folded
ac9dac7f 1566 }
197aec24 1567
ac9dac7f 1568which can also be done with C<map()> which is made to transform
49d635f9 1569one list into another:
1570
1571 @volumes = map {$_ ** 3 * (4/3) * 3.14159} @radii;
68dc0745 1572
76817d6d 1573If you want to do the same thing to modify the values of the
1574hash, you can use the C<values> function. As of Perl 5.6
1575the values are not copied, so if you modify $orbit (in this
1576case), you modify the value.
5a964f20 1577
ac9dac7f 1578 for $orbit ( values %orbits ) {
6670e5e7 1579 ($orbit **= 3) *= (4/3) * 3.14159;
ac9dac7f 1580 }
818c4caa 1581
76817d6d 1582Prior to perl 5.6 C<values> returned copies of the values,
1583so older perl code often contains constructions such as
1584C<@orbits{keys %orbits}> instead of C<values %orbits> where
1585the hash is to be modified.
818c4caa 1586
68dc0745 1587=head2 How do I select a random element from an array?
1588
ac9dac7f 1589Use the C<rand()> function (see L<perlfunc/rand>):
68dc0745 1590
ac9dac7f 1591 $index = rand @array;
1592 $element = $array[$index];
68dc0745 1593
793f5136 1594Or, simply:
ac9dac7f 1595
1596 my $element = $array[ rand @array ];
5a964f20 1597
68dc0745 1598=head2 How do I permute N elements of a list?
c195e131 1599X<List::Permuter> X<permute> X<Algorithm::Loops> X<Knuth>
1600X<The Art of Computer Programming> X<Fischer-Krause>
68dc0745 1601
c195e131 1602Use the C<List::Permutor> module on CPAN. If the list is actually an
ac9dac7f 1603array, try the C<Algorithm::Permute> module (also on CPAN). It's
c195e131 1604written in XS code and is very efficient:
49d635f9 1605
1606 use Algorithm::Permute;
c195e131 1607
49d635f9 1608 my @array = 'a'..'d';
1609 my $p_iterator = Algorithm::Permute->new ( \@array );
c195e131 1610
49d635f9 1611 while (my @perm = $p_iterator->next) {
1612 print "next permutation: (@perm)\n";
ac9dac7f 1613 }
49d635f9 1614
197aec24 1615For even faster execution, you could do:
1616
ac9dac7f 1617 use Algorithm::Permute;
c195e131 1618
ac9dac7f 1619 my @array = 'a'..'d';
c195e131 1620
ac9dac7f 1621 Algorithm::Permute::permute {
1622 print "next permutation: (@array)\n";
1623 } @array;
197aec24 1624
c195e131 1625Here's a little program that generates all permutations of all the
1626words on each line of input. The algorithm embodied in the
1627C<permute()> function is discussed in Volume 4 (still unpublished) of
1628Knuth's I<The Art of Computer Programming> and will work on any list:
49d635f9 1629
1630 #!/usr/bin/perl -n
ac003c96 1631 # Fischer-Krause ordered permutation generator
49d635f9 1632
1633 sub permute (&@) {
1634 my $code = shift;
1635 my @idx = 0..$#_;
1636 while ( $code->(@_[@idx]) ) {
1637 my $p = $#idx;
1638 --$p while $idx[$p-1] > $idx[$p];
1639 my $q = $p or return;
1640 push @idx, reverse splice @idx, $p;
1641 ++$q while $idx[$p-1] > $idx[$q];
1642 @idx[$p-1,$q]=@idx[$q,$p-1];
1643 }
68dc0745 1644 }
68dc0745 1645
c195e131 1646 permute { print "@_\n" } split;
1647
1648The C<Algorithm::Loops> module also provides the C<NextPermute> and
1649C<NextPermuteNum> functions which efficiently find all unique permutations
1650of an array, even if it contains duplicate values, modifying it in-place:
1651if its elements are in reverse-sorted order then the array is reversed,
1652making it sorted, and it returns false; otherwise the next
1653permutation is returned.
1654
1655C<NextPermute> uses string order and C<NextPermuteNum> numeric order, so
1656you can enumerate all the permutations of C<0..9> like this:
1657
1658 use Algorithm::Loops qw(NextPermuteNum);
1659
1660 my @list= 0..9;
1661 do { print "@list\n" } while NextPermuteNum @list;
b8d2732a 1662
68dc0745 1663=head2 How do I sort an array by (anything)?
1664
1665Supply a comparison function to sort() (described in L<perlfunc/sort>):
1666
ac9dac7f 1667 @list = sort { $a <=> $b } @list;
68dc0745 1668
1669The default sort function is cmp, string comparison, which would
c47ff5f1 1670sort C<(1, 2, 10)> into C<(1, 10, 2)>. C<< <=> >>, used above, is
68dc0745 1671the numerical comparison operator.
1672
1673If you have a complicated function needed to pull out the part you
1674want to sort on, then don't do it inside the sort function. Pull it
1675out first, because the sort BLOCK can be called many times for the
1676same element. Here's an example of how to pull out the first word
1677after the first number on each item, and then sort those words
1678case-insensitively.
1679
ac9dac7f 1680 @idx = ();
1681 for (@data) {
1682 ($item) = /\d+\s*(\S+)/;
1683 push @idx, uc($item);
1684 }
1685 @sorted = @data[ sort { $idx[$a] cmp $idx[$b] } 0 .. $#idx ];
68dc0745 1686
a6dd486b 1687which could also be written this way, using a trick
68dc0745 1688that's come to be known as the Schwartzian Transform:
1689
ac9dac7f 1690 @sorted = map { $_->[0] }
1691 sort { $a->[1] cmp $b->[1] }
1692 map { [ $_, uc( (/\d+\s*(\S+)/)[0]) ] } @data;
68dc0745 1693
1694If you need to sort on several fields, the following paradigm is useful.
1695
ac9dac7f 1696 @sorted = sort {
1697 field1($a) <=> field1($b) ||
1698 field2($a) cmp field2($b) ||
1699 field3($a) cmp field3($b)
1700 } @data;
68dc0745 1701
1702This can be conveniently combined with precalculation of keys as given
1703above.
1704
379e39d7 1705See the F<sort> article in the "Far More Than You Ever Wanted
49d635f9 1706To Know" collection in http://www.cpan.org/misc/olddoc/FMTEYEWTK.tgz for
06a5f41f 1707more about this approach.
68dc0745 1708
ac9dac7f 1709See also the question later in L<perlfaq4> on sorting hashes.
68dc0745 1710
1711=head2 How do I manipulate arrays of bits?
1712
ac9dac7f 1713Use C<pack()> and C<unpack()>, or else C<vec()> and the bitwise
1714operations.
1715
1716For example, this sets C<$vec> to have bit N set if C<$ints[N]> was
1717set:
1718
1719 $vec = '';
1720 foreach(@ints) { vec($vec,$_,1) = 1 }
1721
1722Here's how, given a vector in C<$vec>, you can get those bits into your
1723C<@ints> array:
1724
1725 sub bitvec_to_list {
1726 my $vec = shift;
1727 my @ints;
1728 # Find null-byte density then select best algorithm
1729 if ($vec =~ tr/\0// / length $vec > 0.95) {
1730 use integer;
1731 my $i;
1732
1733 # This method is faster with mostly null-bytes
1734 while($vec =~ /[^\0]/g ) {
1735 $i = -9 + 8 * pos $vec;
1736 push @ints, $i if vec($vec, ++$i, 1);
1737 push @ints, $i if vec($vec, ++$i, 1);
1738 push @ints, $i if vec($vec, ++$i, 1);
1739 push @ints, $i if vec($vec, ++$i, 1);
1740 push @ints, $i if vec($vec, ++$i, 1);
1741 push @ints, $i if vec($vec, ++$i, 1);
1742 push @ints, $i if vec($vec, ++$i, 1);
1743 push @ints, $i if vec($vec, ++$i, 1);
1744 }
1745 }
1746 else {
1747 # This method is a fast general algorithm
1748 use integer;
1749 my $bits = unpack "b*", $vec;
1750 push @ints, 0 if $bits =~ s/^(\d)// && $1;
1751 push @ints, pos $bits while($bits =~ /1/g);
1752 }
1753
1754 return \@ints;
1755 }
68dc0745 1756
1757This method gets faster the more sparse the bit vector is.
1758(Courtesy of Tim Bunce and Winfried Koenig.)
1759
76817d6d 1760You can make the while loop a lot shorter with this suggestion
1761from Benjamin Goldberg:
1762
1763 while($vec =~ /[^\0]+/g ) {
ac9dac7f 1764 push @ints, grep vec($vec, $_, 1), $-[0] * 8 .. $+[0] * 8;
1765 }
76817d6d 1766
ac9dac7f 1767Or use the CPAN module C<Bit::Vector>:
cc30d1a7 1768
ac9dac7f 1769 $vector = Bit::Vector->new($num_of_bits);
1770 $vector->Index_List_Store(@ints);
1771 @ints = $vector->Index_List_Read();
cc30d1a7 1772
ac9dac7f 1773C<Bit::Vector> provides efficient methods for bit vector, sets of
1774small integers and "big int" math.
cc30d1a7 1775
1776Here's a more extensive illustration using vec():
65acb1b1 1777
ac9dac7f 1778 # vec demo
1779 $vector = "\xff\x0f\xef\xfe";
1780 print "Ilya's string \\xff\\x0f\\xef\\xfe represents the number ",
65acb1b1 1781 unpack("N", $vector), "\n";
ac9dac7f 1782 $is_set = vec($vector, 23, 1);
1783 print "Its 23rd bit is ", $is_set ? "set" : "clear", ".\n";
65acb1b1 1784 pvec($vector);
65acb1b1 1785
ac9dac7f 1786 set_vec(1,1,1);
1787 set_vec(3,1,1);
1788 set_vec(23,1,1);
1789
1790 set_vec(3,1,3);
1791 set_vec(3,2,3);
1792 set_vec(3,4,3);
1793 set_vec(3,4,7);
1794 set_vec(3,8,3);
1795 set_vec(3,8,7);
1796
1797 set_vec(0,32,17);
1798 set_vec(1,32,17);
1799
1800 sub set_vec {
1801 my ($offset, $width, $value) = @_;
1802 my $vector = '';
1803 vec($vector, $offset, $width) = $value;
1804 print "offset=$offset width=$width value=$value\n";
1805 pvec($vector);
1806 }
65acb1b1 1807
ac9dac7f 1808 sub pvec {
1809 my $vector = shift;
1810 my $bits = unpack("b*", $vector);
1811 my $i = 0;
1812 my $BASE = 8;
1813
1814 print "vector length in bytes: ", length($vector), "\n";
1815 @bytes = unpack("A8" x length($vector), $bits);
1816 print "bits are: @bytes\n\n";
1817 }
65acb1b1 1818
68dc0745 1819=head2 Why does defined() return true on empty arrays and hashes?
1820
65acb1b1 1821The short story is that you should probably only use defined on scalars or
1822functions, not on aggregates (arrays and hashes). See L<perlfunc/defined>
1823in the 5.004 release or later of Perl for more detail.
68dc0745 1824
1825=head1 Data: Hashes (Associative Arrays)
1826
1827=head2 How do I process an entire hash?
1828
ee891a00 1829(contributed by brian d foy)
1830
1831There are a couple of ways that you can process an entire hash. You
1832can get a list of keys, then go through each key, or grab a one
1833key-value pair at a time.
68dc0745 1834
ee891a00 1835To go through all of the keys, use the C<keys> function. This extracts
1836all of the keys of the hash and gives them back to you as a list. You
1837can then get the value through the particular key you're processing:
1838
1839 foreach my $key ( keys %hash ) {
1840 my $value = $hash{$key}
1841 ...
ac9dac7f 1842 }
68dc0745 1843
ee891a00 1844Once you have the list of keys, you can process that list before you
1845process the hashh elements. For instance, you can sort the keys so you
1846can process them in lexical order:
1847
1848 foreach my $key ( sort keys %hash ) {
1849 my $value = $hash{$key}
1850 ...
1851 }
1852
1853Or, you might want to only process some of the items. If you only want
1854to deal with the keys that start with C<text:>, you can select just
1855those using C<grep>:
1856
1857 foreach my $key ( grep /^text:/, keys %hash ) {
1858 my $value = $hash{$key}
1859 ...
1860 }
1861
1862If the hash is very large, you might not want to create a long list of
1863keys. To save some memory, you can grab on key-value pair at a time using
1864C<each()>, which returns a pair you haven't seen yet:
1865
1866 while( my( $key, $value ) = each( %hash ) ) {
1867 ...
1868 }
1869
1870The C<each> operator returns the pairs in apparently random order, so if
1871ordering matters to you, you'll have to stick with the C<keys> method.
1872
1873The C<each()> operator can be a bit tricky though. You can't add or
1874delete keys of the hash while you're using it without possibly
1875skipping or re-processing some pairs after Perl internally rehashes
1876all of the elements. Additionally, a hash has only one iterator, so if
1877you use C<keys>, C<values>, or C<each> on the same hash, you can reset
1878the iterator and mess up your processing. See the C<each> entry in
1879L<perlfunc> for more details.
68dc0745 1880
1881=head2 What happens if I add or remove keys from a hash while iterating over it?
1882
28b41a80 1883(contributed by brian d foy)
d92eb7b0 1884
28b41a80 1885The easy answer is "Don't do that!"
d92eb7b0 1886
28b41a80 1887If you iterate through the hash with each(), you can delete the key
1888most recently returned without worrying about it. If you delete or add
1889other keys, the iterator may skip or double up on them since perl
1890may rearrange the hash table. See the
1891entry for C<each()> in L<perlfunc>.
68dc0745 1892
1893=head2 How do I look up a hash element by value?
1894
1895Create a reverse hash:
1896
ac9dac7f 1897 %by_value = reverse %by_key;
1898 $key = $by_value{$value};
68dc0745 1899
1900That's not particularly efficient. It would be more space-efficient
1901to use:
1902
ac9dac7f 1903 while (($key, $value) = each %by_key) {
1904 $by_value{$value} = $key;
1905 }
68dc0745 1906
d92eb7b0 1907If your hash could have repeated values, the methods above will only find
1908one of the associated keys. This may or may not worry you. If it does
1909worry you, you can always reverse the hash into a hash of arrays instead:
1910
ac9dac7f 1911 while (($key, $value) = each %by_key) {
1912 push @{$key_list_by_value{$value}}, $key;
1913 }
68dc0745 1914
1915=head2 How can I know how many entries are in a hash?
1916
1917If you mean how many keys, then all you have to do is
875e5c2f 1918use the keys() function in a scalar context:
68dc0745 1919
875e5c2f 1920 $num_keys = keys %hash;
68dc0745 1921
197aec24 1922The keys() function also resets the iterator, which means that you may
1923see strange results if you use this between uses of other hash operators
875e5c2f 1924such as each().
68dc0745 1925
1926=head2 How do I sort a hash (optionally by value instead of key)?
1927
a05e4845 1928(contributed by brian d foy)
1929
1930To sort a hash, start with the keys. In this example, we give the list of
1931keys to the sort function which then compares them ASCIIbetically (which
1932might be affected by your locale settings). The output list has the keys
1933in ASCIIbetical order. Once we have the keys, we can go through them to
1934create a report which lists the keys in ASCIIbetical order.
1935
1936 my @keys = sort { $a cmp $b } keys %hash;
58103a2e 1937
a05e4845 1938 foreach my $key ( @keys )
1939 {
1940 printf "%-20s %6d\n", $key, $hash{$value};
1941 }
1942
58103a2e 1943We could get more fancy in the C<sort()> block though. Instead of
a05e4845 1944comparing the keys, we can compute a value with them and use that
58103a2e 1945value as the comparison.
a05e4845 1946
1947For instance, to make our report order case-insensitive, we use
58103a2e 1948the C<\L> sequence in a double-quoted string to make everything
a05e4845 1949lowercase. The C<sort()> block then compares the lowercased
1950values to determine in which order to put the keys.
1951
1952 my @keys = sort { "\L$a" cmp "\L$b" } keys %hash;
58103a2e 1953
a05e4845 1954Note: if the computation is expensive or the hash has many elements,
58103a2e 1955you may want to look at the Schwartzian Transform to cache the
a05e4845 1956computation results.
1957
1958If we want to sort by the hash value instead, we use the hash key
1959to look it up. We still get out a list of keys, but this time they
1960are ordered by their value.
1961
1962 my @keys = sort { $hash{$a} <=> $hash{$b} } keys %hash;
1963
1964From there we can get more complex. If the hash values are the same,
1965we can provide a secondary sort on the hash key.
1966
58103a2e 1967 my @keys = sort {
1968 $hash{$a} <=> $hash{$b}
a05e4845 1969 or
1970 "\L$a" cmp "\L$b"
1971 } keys %hash;
68dc0745 1972
1973=head2 How can I always keep my hash sorted?
ac9dac7f 1974X<hash tie sort DB_File Tie::IxHash>
68dc0745 1975
ac9dac7f 1976You can look into using the C<DB_File> module and C<tie()> using the
1977C<$DB_BTREE> hash bindings as documented in L<DB_File/"In Memory
1978Databases">. The C<Tie::IxHash> module from CPAN might also be
1979instructive. Although this does keep your hash sorted, you might not
1980like the slow down you suffer from the tie interface. Are you sure you
1981need to do this? :)
68dc0745 1982
1983=head2 What's the difference between "delete" and "undef" with hashes?
1984
92993692 1985Hashes contain pairs of scalars: the first is the key, the
1986second is the value. The key will be coerced to a string,
1987although the value can be any kind of scalar: string,
ac9dac7f 1988number, or reference. If a key C<$key> is present in
92993692 1989%hash, C<exists($hash{$key})> will return true. The value
1990for a given key can be C<undef>, in which case
1991C<$hash{$key}> will be C<undef> while C<exists $hash{$key}>
1992will return true. This corresponds to (C<$key>, C<undef>)
1993being in the hash.
68dc0745 1994
ac9dac7f 1995Pictures help... here's the C<%hash> table:
68dc0745 1996
1997 keys values
1998 +------+------+
1999 | a | 3 |
2000 | x | 7 |
2001 | d | 0 |
2002 | e | 2 |
2003 +------+------+
2004
2005And these conditions hold
2006
92993692 2007 $hash{'a'} is true
2008 $hash{'d'} is false
2009 defined $hash{'d'} is true
2010 defined $hash{'a'} is true
e9d185f8 2011 exists $hash{'a'} is true (Perl 5 only)
92993692 2012 grep ($_ eq 'a', keys %hash) is true
68dc0745 2013
2014If you now say
2015
92993692 2016 undef $hash{'a'}
68dc0745 2017
2018your table now reads:
2019
2020
2021 keys values
2022 +------+------+
2023 | a | undef|
2024 | x | 7 |
2025 | d | 0 |
2026 | e | 2 |
2027 +------+------+
2028
2029and these conditions now hold; changes in caps:
2030
92993692 2031 $hash{'a'} is FALSE
2032 $hash{'d'} is false
2033 defined $hash{'d'} is true
2034 defined $hash{'a'} is FALSE
e9d185f8 2035 exists $hash{'a'} is true (Perl 5 only)
92993692 2036 grep ($_ eq 'a', keys %hash) is true
68dc0745 2037
2038Notice the last two: you have an undef value, but a defined key!
2039
2040Now, consider this:
2041
92993692 2042 delete $hash{'a'}
68dc0745 2043
2044your table now reads:
2045
2046 keys values
2047 +------+------+
2048 | x | 7 |
2049 | d | 0 |
2050 | e | 2 |
2051 +------+------+
2052
2053and these conditions now hold; changes in caps:
2054
92993692 2055 $hash{'a'} is false
2056 $hash{'d'} is false
2057 defined $hash{'d'} is true
2058 defined $hash{'a'} is false
e9d185f8 2059 exists $hash{'a'} is FALSE (Perl 5 only)
92993692 2060 grep ($_ eq 'a', keys %hash) is FALSE
68dc0745 2061
2062See, the whole entry is gone!
2063
2064=head2 Why don't my tied hashes make the defined/exists distinction?
2065
92993692 2066This depends on the tied hash's implementation of EXISTS().
2067For example, there isn't the concept of undef with hashes
2068that are tied to DBM* files. It also means that exists() and
2069defined() do the same thing with a DBM* file, and what they
2070end up doing is not what they do with ordinary hashes.
68dc0745 2071
2072=head2 How do I reset an each() operation part-way through?
2073
fb2fe781 2074(contributed by brian d foy)
2075
2076You can use the C<keys> or C<values> functions to reset C<each>. To
2077simply reset the iterator used by C<each> without doing anything else,
2078use one of them in void context:
2079
2080 keys %hash; # resets iterator, nothing else.
2081 values %hash; # resets iterator, nothing else.
2082
2083See the documentation for C<each> in L<perlfunc>.
68dc0745 2084
2085=head2 How can I get the unique keys from two hashes?
2086
d92eb7b0 2087First you extract the keys from the hashes into lists, then solve
2088the "removing duplicates" problem described above. For example:
68dc0745 2089
ac9dac7f 2090 %seen = ();
2091 for $element (keys(%foo), keys(%bar)) {
2092 $seen{$element}++;
2093 }
2094 @uniq = keys %seen;
68dc0745 2095
2096Or more succinctly:
2097
ac9dac7f 2098 @uniq = keys %{{%foo,%bar}};
68dc0745 2099
2100Or if you really want to save space:
2101
ac9dac7f 2102 %seen = ();
2103 while (defined ($key = each %foo)) {
2104 $seen{$key}++;
2105 }
2106 while (defined ($key = each %bar)) {
2107 $seen{$key}++;
2108 }
2109 @uniq = keys %seen;
68dc0745 2110
2111=head2 How can I store a multidimensional array in a DBM file?
2112
2113Either stringify the structure yourself (no fun), or else
2114get the MLDBM (which uses Data::Dumper) module from CPAN and layer
2115it on top of either DB_File or GDBM_File.
2116
2117=head2 How can I make my hash remember the order I put elements into it?
2118
ac9dac7f 2119Use the C<Tie::IxHash> from CPAN.
68dc0745 2120
ac9dac7f 2121 use Tie::IxHash;
2122
2123 tie my %myhash, 'Tie::IxHash';
2124
2125 for (my $i=0; $i<20; $i++) {
2126 $myhash{$i} = 2*$i;
2127 }
2128
2129 my @keys = keys %myhash;
2130 # @keys = (0,1,2,3,...)
46fc3d4c 2131
68dc0745 2132=head2 Why does passing a subroutine an undefined element in a hash create it?
2133
2134If you say something like:
2135
ac9dac7f 2136 somefunc($hash{"nonesuch key here"});
68dc0745 2137
2138Then that element "autovivifies"; that is, it springs into existence
2139whether you store something there or not. That's because functions
2140get scalars passed in by reference. If somefunc() modifies C<$_[0]>,
2141it has to be ready to write it back into the caller's version.
2142
87275199 2143This has been fixed as of Perl5.004.
68dc0745 2144
2145Normally, merely accessing a key's value for a nonexistent key does
2146I<not> cause that key to be forever there. This is different than
2147awk's behavior.
2148
fc36a67e 2149=head2 How can I make the Perl equivalent of a C structure/C++ class/hash or array of hashes or arrays?
68dc0745 2150
65acb1b1 2151Usually a hash ref, perhaps like this:
2152
ac9dac7f 2153 $record = {
2154 NAME => "Jason",
2155 EMPNO => 132,
2156 TITLE => "deputy peon",
2157 AGE => 23,
2158 SALARY => 37_000,
2159 PALS => [ "Norbert", "Rhys", "Phineas"],
2160 };
65acb1b1 2161
2162References are documented in L<perlref> and the upcoming L<perlreftut>.
2163Examples of complex data structures are given in L<perldsc> and
2164L<perllol>. Examples of structures and object-oriented classes are
2165in L<perltoot>.
68dc0745 2166
2167=head2 How can I use a reference as a hash key?
2168
9e72e4c6 2169(contributed by brian d foy)
2170
2171Hash keys are strings, so you can't really use a reference as the key.
2172When you try to do that, perl turns the reference into its stringified
ac9dac7f 2173form (for instance, C<HASH(0xDEADBEEF)>). From there you can't get
2174back the reference from the stringified form, at least without doing
2175some extra work on your own. Also remember that hash keys must be
2176unique, but two different variables can store the same reference (and
2177those variables can change later).
9e72e4c6 2178
ac9dac7f 2179The C<Tie::RefHash> module, which is distributed with perl, might be
2180what you want. It handles that extra work.
68dc0745 2181
2182=head1 Data: Misc
2183
2184=head2 How do I handle binary data correctly?
2185
ac9dac7f 2186Perl is binary clean, so it can handle binary data just fine.
e573f903 2187On Windows or DOS, however, you have to use C<binmode> for binary
ac9dac7f 2188files to avoid conversions for line endings. In general, you should
2189use C<binmode> any time you want to work with binary data.
68dc0745 2190
ac9dac7f 2191Also see L<perlfunc/"binmode"> or L<perlopentut>.
68dc0745 2192
ac9dac7f 2193If you're concerned about 8-bit textual data then see L<perllocale>.
54310121 2194If you want to deal with multibyte characters, however, there are
68dc0745 2195some gotchas. See the section on Regular Expressions.
2196
2197=head2 How do I determine whether a scalar is a number/whole/integer/float?
2198
2199Assuming that you don't care about IEEE notations like "NaN" or
2200"Infinity", you probably just want to use a regular expression.
2201
ac9dac7f 2202 if (/\D/) { print "has nondigits\n" }
2203 if (/^\d+$/) { print "is a whole number\n" }
2204 if (/^-?\d+$/) { print "is an integer\n" }
2205 if (/^[+-]?\d+$/) { print "is a +/- integer\n" }
2206 if (/^-?\d+\.?\d*$/) { print "is a real number\n" }
2207 if (/^-?(?:\d+(?:\.\d*)?|\.\d+)$/) { print "is a decimal number\n" }
2208 if (/^([+-]?)(?=\d|\.\d)\d*(\.\d*)?([Ee]([+-]?\d+))?$/)
881bdbd4 2209 { print "a C float\n" }
68dc0745 2210
f0d19b68 2211There are also some commonly used modules for the task.
2212L<Scalar::Util> (distributed with 5.8) provides access to perl's
ac9dac7f 2213internal function C<looks_like_number> for determining whether a
2214variable looks like a number. L<Data::Types> exports functions that
2215validate data types using both the above and other regular
2216expressions. Thirdly, there is C<Regexp::Common> which has regular
2217expressions to match various types of numbers. Those three modules are
2218available from the CPAN.
f0d19b68 2219
2220If you're on a POSIX system, Perl supports the C<POSIX::strtod>
ac9dac7f 2221function. Its semantics are somewhat cumbersome, so here's a
2222C<getnum> wrapper function for more convenient access. This function
2223takes a string and returns the number it found, or C<undef> for input
2224that isn't a C float. The C<is_numeric> function is a front end to
2225C<getnum> if you just want to say, "Is this a float?"
2226
2227 sub getnum {
2228 use POSIX qw(strtod);
2229 my $str = shift;
2230 $str =~ s/^\s+//;
2231 $str =~ s/\s+$//;
2232 $! = 0;
2233 my($num, $unparsed) = strtod($str);
2234 if (($str eq '') || ($unparsed != 0) || $!) {
2235 return undef;
2236 }
2237 else {
2238 return $num;
2239 }
2240 }
5a964f20 2241
ac9dac7f 2242 sub is_numeric { defined getnum($_[0]) }
5a964f20 2243
f0d19b68 2244Or you could check out the L<String::Scanf> module on the CPAN
ac9dac7f 2245instead. The C<POSIX> module (part of the standard Perl distribution)
2246provides the C<strtod> and C<strtol> for converting strings to double
2247and longs, respectively.
68dc0745 2248
2249=head2 How do I keep persistent data across program calls?
2250
2251For some specific applications, you can use one of the DBM modules.
ac9dac7f 2252See L<AnyDBM_File>. More generically, you should consult the C<FreezeThaw>
2253or C<Storable> modules from CPAN. Starting from Perl 5.8 C<Storable> is part
2254of the standard distribution. Here's one example using C<Storable>'s C<store>
fe854a6f 2255and C<retrieve> functions:
65acb1b1 2256
ac9dac7f 2257 use Storable;
2258 store(\%hash, "filename");
65acb1b1 2259
ac9dac7f 2260 # later on...
2261 $href = retrieve("filename"); # by ref
2262 %hash = %{ retrieve("filename") }; # direct to hash
68dc0745 2263
2264=head2 How do I print out or copy a recursive data structure?
2265
ac9dac7f 2266The C<Data::Dumper> module on CPAN (or the 5.005 release of Perl) is great
2267for printing out data structures. The C<Storable> module on CPAN (or the
6f82c03a 22685.8 release of Perl), provides a function called C<dclone> that recursively
2269copies its argument.
65acb1b1 2270
ac9dac7f 2271 use Storable qw(dclone);
2272 $r2 = dclone($r1);
68dc0745 2273
ac9dac7f 2274Where C<$r1> can be a reference to any kind of data structure you'd like.
65acb1b1 2275It will be deeply copied. Because C<dclone> takes and returns references,
2276you'd have to add extra punctuation if you had a hash of arrays that
2277you wanted to copy.
68dc0745 2278
ac9dac7f 2279 %newhash = %{ dclone(\%oldhash) };
68dc0745 2280
2281=head2 How do I define methods for every class/object?
2282
ac9dac7f 2283Use the C<UNIVERSAL> class (see L<UNIVERSAL>).
68dc0745 2284
2285=head2 How do I verify a credit card checksum?
2286
ac9dac7f 2287Get the C<Business::CreditCard> module from CPAN.
68dc0745 2288
65acb1b1 2289=head2 How do I pack arrays of doubles or floats for XS code?
2290
ac9dac7f 2291The kgbpack.c code in the C<PGPLOT> module on CPAN does just this.
65acb1b1 2292If you're doing a lot of float or double processing, consider using
ac9dac7f 2293the C<PDL> module from CPAN instead--it makes number-crunching easy.
65acb1b1 2294
500071f4 2295=head1 REVISION
2296
fb2fe781 2297Revision: $Revision: 10394 $
500071f4 2298
fb2fe781 2299Date: $Date: 2007-12-09 18:47:15 +0100 (Sun, 09 Dec 2007) $
500071f4 2300
2301See L<perlfaq> for source control details and availability.
2302
68dc0745 2303=head1 AUTHOR AND COPYRIGHT
2304
ee891a00 2305Copyright (c) 1997-2007 Tom Christiansen, Nathan Torkington, and
7678cced 2306other authors as noted. All rights reserved.
5a964f20 2307
5a7beb56 2308This documentation is free; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
2309under the same terms as Perl itself.
5a964f20 2310
2311Irrespective of its distribution, all code examples in this file
2312are hereby placed into the public domain. You are permitted and
2313encouraged to use this code in your own programs for fun
2314or for profit as you see fit. A simple comment in the code giving
2315credit would be courteous but is not required.