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68dc0745 1=head1 NAME
2
49d635f9 3perlfaq4 - Data Manipulation ($Revision: 1.37 $, $Date: 2002/11/13 06:04:00 $)
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
49d635f9 14Internally, your computer represents floating-point numbers
15in binary. Digital (as in powers of two) computers cannot
16store all numbers exactly. Some real numbers lose precision
17in the process. This is a problem with how computers store
18numbers and affects all computer languages, not just Perl.
46fc3d4c 19
49d635f9 20L<perlnumber> show the gory details of number
21representations and conversions.
22
23To limit the number of decimal places in your numbers, you
24can use the printf or sprintf function. See the
25L<perlop|"Floating Point Arithmetic"> for more details.
26
27 printf "%.2f", 10/3;
28
29 my $number = sprintf "%.2f", 10/3;
30
68dc0745 31=head2 Why isn't my octal data interpreted correctly?
32
49d635f9 33Perl only understands octal and hex numbers as such when they occur as
34literals in your program. Octal literals in perl must start with a
35leading "0" and hexadecimal literals must start with a leading "0x".
36If they are read in from somewhere and assigned, no automatic
37conversion takes place. You must explicitly use oct() or hex() if you
38want the values converted to decimal. oct() interprets hex ("0x350"),
39octal ("0350" or even without the leading "0", like "377") and binary
40("0b1010") numbers, while hex() only converts hexadecimal ones, with
41or without a leading "0x", like "0x255", "3A", "ff", or "deadbeef".
33ce146f 42The inverse mapping from decimal to octal can be done with either the
49d635f9 43"%o" or "%O" sprintf() formats.
68dc0745 44
45This problem shows up most often when people try using chmod(), mkdir(),
33ce146f 46umask(), or sysopen(), which by widespread tradition typically take
47permissions in octal.
68dc0745 48
33ce146f 49 chmod(644, $file); # WRONG
68dc0745 50 chmod(0644, $file); # right
51
33ce146f 52Note the mistake in the first line was specifying the decimal literal
53644, rather than the intended octal literal 0644. The problem can
54be seen with:
55
434f7166 56 printf("%#o",644); # prints 01204
33ce146f 57
58Surely you had not intended C<chmod(01204, $file);> - did you? If you
59want to use numeric literals as arguments to chmod() et al. then please
60try to express them as octal constants, that is with a leading zero and
61with the following digits restricted to the set 0..7.
62
65acb1b1 63=head2 Does Perl have a round() function? What about ceil() and floor()? Trig functions?
68dc0745 64
92c2ed05 65Remember that int() merely truncates toward 0. For rounding to a
66certain number of digits, sprintf() or printf() is usually the easiest
67route.
68
69 printf("%.3f", 3.1415926535); # prints 3.142
68dc0745 70
87275199 71The POSIX module (part of the standard Perl distribution) implements
68dc0745 72ceil(), floor(), and a number of other mathematical and trigonometric
73functions.
74
92c2ed05 75 use POSIX;
76 $ceil = ceil(3.5); # 4
77 $floor = floor(3.5); # 3
78
a6dd486b 79In 5.000 to 5.003 perls, trigonometry was done in the Math::Complex
87275199 80module. With 5.004, the Math::Trig module (part of the standard Perl
46fc3d4c 81distribution) implements the trigonometric functions. Internally it
82uses the Math::Complex module and some functions can break out from
83the real axis into the complex plane, for example the inverse sine of
842.
68dc0745 85
86Rounding in financial applications can have serious implications, and
87the rounding method used should be specified precisely. In these
88cases, it probably pays not to trust whichever system rounding is
89being used by Perl, but to instead implement the rounding function you
90need yourself.
91
65acb1b1 92To see why, notice how you'll still have an issue on half-way-point
93alternation:
94
95 for ($i = 0; $i < 1.01; $i += 0.05) { printf "%.1f ",$i}
96
97 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
98 0.8 0.8 0.9 0.9 1.0 1.0
99
100Don't blame Perl. It's the same as in C. IEEE says we have to do this.
101Perl numbers whose absolute values are integers under 2**31 (on 32 bit
102machines) will work pretty much like mathematical integers. Other numbers
103are not guaranteed.
104
ae3d0b9f 105=head2 How do I convert between numeric representations?
68dc0745 106
6761e064 107As always with Perl there is more than one way to do it. Below
108are a few examples of approaches to making common conversions
109between number representations. This is intended to be representational
110rather than exhaustive.
68dc0745 111
6761e064 112Some of the examples below use the Bit::Vector module from CPAN.
113The reason you might choose Bit::Vector over the perl built in
114functions is that it works with numbers of ANY size, that it is
115optimized for speed on some operations, and for at least some
116programmers the notation might be familiar.
d92eb7b0 117
818c4caa 118=over 4
119
120=item How do I convert hexadecimal into decimal
d92eb7b0 121
6761e064 122Using perl's built in conversion of 0x notation:
123
124 $int = 0xDEADBEEF;
125 $dec = sprintf("%d", $int);
7207e29d 126
6761e064 127Using the hex function:
128
129 $int = hex("DEADBEEF");
130 $dec = sprintf("%d", $int);
131
132Using pack:
133
134 $int = unpack("N", pack("H8", substr("0" x 8 . "DEADBEEF", -8)));
135 $dec = sprintf("%d", $int);
136
137Using the CPAN module Bit::Vector:
138
139 use Bit::Vector;
140 $vec = Bit::Vector->new_Hex(32, "DEADBEEF");
141 $dec = $vec->to_Dec();
142
818c4caa 143=item How do I convert from decimal to hexadecimal
6761e064 144
145Using sprint:
146
147 $hex = sprintf("%X", 3735928559);
148
149Using unpack
150
151 $hex = unpack("H*", pack("N", 3735928559));
152
153Using Bit::Vector
154
155 use Bit::Vector;
156 $vec = Bit::Vector->new_Dec(32, -559038737);
157 $hex = $vec->to_Hex();
158
159And Bit::Vector supports odd bit counts:
160
161 use Bit::Vector;
162 $vec = Bit::Vector->new_Dec(33, 3735928559);
163 $vec->Resize(32); # suppress leading 0 if unwanted
164 $hex = $vec->to_Hex();
165
818c4caa 166=item How do I convert from octal to decimal
6761e064 167
168Using Perl's built in conversion of numbers with leading zeros:
169
170 $int = 033653337357; # note the leading 0!
171 $dec = sprintf("%d", $int);
172
173Using the oct function:
174
175 $int = oct("33653337357");
176 $dec = sprintf("%d", $int);
177
178Using Bit::Vector:
179
180 use Bit::Vector;
181 $vec = Bit::Vector->new(32);
182 $vec->Chunk_List_Store(3, split(//, reverse "33653337357"));
183 $dec = $vec->to_Dec();
184
818c4caa 185=item How do I convert from decimal to octal
6761e064 186
187Using sprintf:
188
189 $oct = sprintf("%o", 3735928559);
190
191Using Bit::Vector
192
193 use Bit::Vector;
194 $vec = Bit::Vector->new_Dec(32, -559038737);
195 $oct = reverse join('', $vec->Chunk_List_Read(3));
196
818c4caa 197=item How do I convert from binary to decimal
6761e064 198
2c646907 199Perl 5.6 lets you write binary numbers directly with
200the 0b notation:
201
202 $number = 0b10110110;
203
6761e064 204Using pack and ord
d92eb7b0 205
206 $decimal = ord(pack('B8', '10110110'));
68dc0745 207
6761e064 208Using pack and unpack for larger strings
209
210 $int = unpack("N", pack("B32",
211 substr("0" x 32 . "11110101011011011111011101111", -32)));
212 $dec = sprintf("%d", $int);
213
5efd7060 214 # substr() is used to left pad a 32 character string with zeros.
6761e064 215
216Using Bit::Vector:
217
218 $vec = Bit::Vector->new_Bin(32, "11011110101011011011111011101111");
219 $dec = $vec->to_Dec();
220
818c4caa 221=item How do I convert from decimal to binary
6761e064 222
223Using unpack;
224
225 $bin = unpack("B*", pack("N", 3735928559));
226
227Using Bit::Vector:
228
229 use Bit::Vector;
230 $vec = Bit::Vector->new_Dec(32, -559038737);
231 $bin = $vec->to_Bin();
232
233The remaining transformations (e.g. hex -> oct, bin -> hex, etc.)
234are left as an exercise to the inclined reader.
68dc0745 235
818c4caa 236=back
68dc0745 237
65acb1b1 238=head2 Why doesn't & work the way I want it to?
239
240The behavior of binary arithmetic operators depends on whether they're
241used on numbers or strings. The operators treat a string as a series
242of bits and work with that (the string C<"3"> is the bit pattern
243C<00110011>). The operators work with the binary form of a number
244(the number C<3> is treated as the bit pattern C<00000011>).
245
246So, saying C<11 & 3> performs the "and" operation on numbers (yielding
49d635f9 247C<3>). Saying C<"11" & "3"> performs the "and" operation on strings
65acb1b1 248(yielding C<"1">).
249
250Most problems with C<&> and C<|> arise because the programmer thinks
251they have a number but really it's a string. The rest arise because
252the programmer says:
253
254 if ("\020\020" & "\101\101") {
255 # ...
256 }
257
258but a string consisting of two null bytes (the result of C<"\020\020"
259& "\101\101">) is not a false value in Perl. You need:
260
261 if ( ("\020\020" & "\101\101") !~ /[^\000]/) {
262 # ...
263 }
264
68dc0745 265=head2 How do I multiply matrices?
266
267Use the Math::Matrix or Math::MatrixReal modules (available from CPAN)
268or the PDL extension (also available from CPAN).
269
270=head2 How do I perform an operation on a series of integers?
271
272To call a function on each element in an array, and collect the
273results, use:
274
275 @results = map { my_func($_) } @array;
276
277For example:
278
279 @triple = map { 3 * $_ } @single;
280
281To call a function on each element of an array, but ignore the
282results:
283
284 foreach $iterator (@array) {
65acb1b1 285 some_func($iterator);
68dc0745 286 }
287
288To call a function on each integer in a (small) range, you B<can> use:
289
65acb1b1 290 @results = map { some_func($_) } (5 .. 25);
68dc0745 291
292but you should be aware that the C<..> operator creates an array of
293all integers in the range. This can take a lot of memory for large
294ranges. Instead use:
295
296 @results = ();
297 for ($i=5; $i < 500_005; $i++) {
65acb1b1 298 push(@results, some_func($i));
68dc0745 299 }
300
87275199 301This situation has been fixed in Perl5.005. Use of C<..> in a C<for>
302loop will iterate over the range, without creating the entire range.
303
304 for my $i (5 .. 500_005) {
305 push(@results, some_func($i));
306 }
307
308will not create a list of 500,000 integers.
309
68dc0745 310=head2 How can I output Roman numerals?
311
a93751fa 312Get the http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-module/Roman module.
68dc0745 313
314=head2 Why aren't my random numbers random?
315
65acb1b1 316If you're using a version of Perl before 5.004, you must call C<srand>
317once at the start of your program to seed the random number generator.
49d635f9 318
319 BEGIN { srand() if $[ < 5.004 }
320
65acb1b1 3215.004 and later automatically call C<srand> at the beginning. Don't
49d635f9 322call C<srand> more than once---you make your numbers less random, rather
65acb1b1 323than more.
92c2ed05 324
65acb1b1 325Computers are good at being predictable and bad at being random
06a5f41f 326(despite appearances caused by bugs in your programs :-). see the
49d635f9 327F<random> article in the "Far More Than You Ever Wanted To Know"
328collection in http://www.cpan.org/misc/olddoc/FMTEYEWTK.tgz , courtesy of
06a5f41f 329Tom Phoenix, talks more about this. John von Neumann said, ``Anyone
330who attempts to generate random numbers by deterministic means is, of
65acb1b1 331course, living in a state of sin.''
332
333If you want numbers that are more random than C<rand> with C<srand>
334provides, you should also check out the Math::TrulyRandom module from
335CPAN. It uses the imperfections in your system's timer to generate
336random numbers, but this takes quite a while. If you want a better
92c2ed05 337pseudorandom generator than comes with your operating system, look at
65acb1b1 338``Numerical Recipes in C'' at http://www.nr.com/ .
68dc0745 339
881bdbd4 340=head2 How do I get a random number between X and Y?
341
342Use the following simple function. It selects a random integer between
343(and possibly including!) the two given integers, e.g.,
344C<random_int_in(50,120)>
345
346 sub random_int_in ($$) {
347 my($min, $max) = @_;
348 # Assumes that the two arguments are integers themselves!
349 return $min if $min == $max;
350 ($min, $max) = ($max, $min) if $min > $max;
351 return $min + int rand(1 + $max - $min);
352 }
353
68dc0745 354=head1 Data: Dates
355
356=head2 How do I find the week-of-the-year/day-of-the-year?
357
358The day of the year is in the array returned by localtime() (see
359L<perlfunc/"localtime">):
360
361 $day_of_year = (localtime(time()))[7];
362
d92eb7b0 363=head2 How do I find the current century or millennium?
364
365Use the following simple functions:
366
367 sub get_century {
368 return int((((localtime(shift || time))[5] + 1999))/100);
369 }
370 sub get_millennium {
371 return 1+int((((localtime(shift || time))[5] + 1899))/1000);
372 }
373
49d635f9 374You can also use the POSIX strftime() function which may be a bit
375slower but is easier to read and maintain.
376
377 use POSIX qw/strftime/;
378
379 my $week_of_the_year = strftime "%W", localtime;
380 my $day_of_the_year = strftime "%j", localtime;
381
382On some systems, the POSIX module's strftime() function has
383been extended in a non-standard way to use a C<%C> format,
384which they sometimes claim is the "century". It isn't,
385because on most such systems, this is only the first two
386digits of the four-digit year, and thus cannot be used to
387reliably determine the current century or millennium.
d92eb7b0 388
92c2ed05 389=head2 How can I compare two dates and find the difference?
68dc0745 390
92c2ed05 391If you're storing your dates as epoch seconds then simply subtract one
392from the other. If you've got a structured date (distinct year, day,
d92eb7b0 393month, hour, minute, seconds values), then for reasons of accessibility,
394simplicity, and efficiency, merely use either timelocal or timegm (from
395the Time::Local module in the standard distribution) to reduce structured
396dates to epoch seconds. However, if you don't know the precise format of
397your dates, then you should probably use either of the Date::Manip and
398Date::Calc modules from CPAN before you go hacking up your own parsing
399routine to handle arbitrary date formats.
68dc0745 400
401=head2 How can I take a string and turn it into epoch seconds?
402
403If it's a regular enough string that it always has the same format,
92c2ed05 404you can split it up and pass the parts to C<timelocal> in the standard
405Time::Local module. Otherwise, you should look into the Date::Calc
406and Date::Manip modules from CPAN.
68dc0745 407
408=head2 How can I find the Julian Day?
409
2a2bf5f4 410Use the Time::JulianDay module (part of the Time-modules bundle
411available from CPAN.)
d92eb7b0 412
89435c96 413Before you immerse yourself too deeply in this, be sure to verify that
414it is the I<Julian> Day you really want. Are you interested in a way
415of getting serial days so that you just can tell how many days they
416are apart or so that you can do also other date arithmetic? If you
d92eb7b0 417are interested in performing date arithmetic, this can be done using
2a2bf5f4 418modules Date::Manip or Date::Calc.
89435c96 419
420There is too many details and much confusion on this issue to cover in
421this FAQ, but the term is applied (correctly) to a calendar now
422supplanted by the Gregorian Calendar, with the Julian Calendar failing
423to adjust properly for leap years on centennial years (among other
424annoyances). The term is also used (incorrectly) to mean: [1] days in
425the Gregorian Calendar; and [2] days since a particular starting time
426or `epoch', usually 1970 in the Unix world and 1980 in the
427MS-DOS/Windows world. If you find that it is not the first meaning
428that you really want, then check out the Date::Manip and Date::Calc
429modules. (Thanks to David Cassell for most of this text.)
be94a901 430
65acb1b1 431=head2 How do I find yesterday's date?
432
49d635f9 433If you only need to find the date (and not the same time), you
434can use the Date::Calc module.
65acb1b1 435
49d635f9 436 use Date::Calc qw(Today Add_Delta_Days);
437
438 my @date = Add_Delta_Days( Today(), -1 );
439
440 print "@date\n";
65acb1b1 441
49d635f9 442Most people try to use the time rather than the calendar to
443figure out dates, but that assumes that your days are
444twenty-four hours each. For most people, there are two days
445a year when they aren't: the switch to and from summer time
446throws this off. Russ Allbery offers this solution.
d92eb7b0 447
448 sub yesterday {
49d635f9 449 my $now = defined $_[0] ? $_[0] : time;
450 my $then = $now - 60 * 60 * 24;
451 my $ndst = (localtime $now)[8] > 0;
452 my $tdst = (localtime $then)[8] > 0;
453 $then - ($tdst - $ndst) * 60 * 60;
454 }
455
456Should give you "this time yesterday" in seconds since epoch relative to
457the first argument or the current time if no argument is given and
458suitable for passing to localtime or whatever else you need to do with
459it. $ndst is whether we're currently in daylight savings time; $tdst is
460whether the point 24 hours ago was in daylight savings time. If $tdst
461and $ndst are the same, a boundary wasn't crossed, and the correction
462will subtract 0. If $tdst is 1 and $ndst is 0, subtract an hour more
463from yesterday's time since we gained an extra hour while going off
464daylight savings time. If $tdst is 0 and $ndst is 1, subtract a
465negative hour (add an hour) to yesterday's time since we lost an hour.
466
467All of this is because during those days when one switches off or onto
468DST, a "day" isn't 24 hours long; it's either 23 or 25.
469
470The explicit settings of $ndst and $tdst are necessary because localtime
471only says it returns the system tm struct, and the system tm struct at
472least on Solaris doesn't guarantee any particular positive value (like,
473say, 1) for isdst, just a positive value. And that value can
474potentially be negative, if DST information isn't available (this sub
475just treats those cases like no DST).
476
477Note that between 2am and 3am on the day after the time zone switches
478off daylight savings time, the exact hour of "yesterday" corresponding
479to the current hour is not clearly defined. Note also that if used
480between 2am and 3am the day after the change to daylight savings time,
481the result will be between 3am and 4am of the previous day; it's
482arguable whether this is correct.
483
484This sub does not attempt to deal with leap seconds (most things don't).
485
486
d92eb7b0 487
87275199 488=head2 Does Perl have a Year 2000 problem? Is Perl Y2K compliant?
68dc0745 489
65acb1b1 490Short answer: No, Perl does not have a Year 2000 problem. Yes, Perl is
491Y2K compliant (whatever that means). The programmers you've hired to
492use it, however, probably are not.
493
494Long answer: The question belies a true understanding of the issue.
495Perl is just as Y2K compliant as your pencil--no more, and no less.
496Can you use your pencil to write a non-Y2K-compliant memo? Of course
497you can. Is that the pencil's fault? Of course it isn't.
92c2ed05 498
87275199 499The date and time functions supplied with Perl (gmtime and localtime)
65acb1b1 500supply adequate information to determine the year well beyond 2000
501(2038 is when trouble strikes for 32-bit machines). The year returned
90fdbbb7 502by these functions when used in a list context is the year minus 1900.
65acb1b1 503For years between 1910 and 1999 this I<happens> to be a 2-digit decimal
504number. To avoid the year 2000 problem simply do not treat the year as
505a 2-digit number. It isn't.
68dc0745 506
5a964f20 507When gmtime() and localtime() are used in scalar context they return
68dc0745 508a timestamp string that contains a fully-expanded year. For example,
509C<$timestamp = gmtime(1005613200)> sets $timestamp to "Tue Nov 13 01:00:00
5102001". There's no year 2000 problem here.
511
5a964f20 512That doesn't mean that Perl can't be used to create non-Y2K compliant
513programs. It can. But so can your pencil. It's the fault of the user,
514not the language. At the risk of inflaming the NRA: ``Perl doesn't
515break Y2K, people do.'' See http://language.perl.com/news/y2k.html for
516a longer exposition.
517
68dc0745 518=head1 Data: Strings
519
520=head2 How do I validate input?
521
522The answer to this question is usually a regular expression, perhaps
5a964f20 523with auxiliary logic. See the more specific questions (numbers, mail
68dc0745 524addresses, etc.) for details.
525
526=head2 How do I unescape a string?
527
92c2ed05 528It depends just what you mean by ``escape''. URL escapes are dealt
529with in L<perlfaq9>. Shell escapes with the backslash (C<\>)
a6dd486b 530character are removed with
68dc0745 531
532 s/\\(.)/$1/g;
533
92c2ed05 534This won't expand C<"\n"> or C<"\t"> or any other special escapes.
68dc0745 535
536=head2 How do I remove consecutive pairs of characters?
537
92c2ed05 538To turn C<"abbcccd"> into C<"abccd">:
68dc0745 539
d92eb7b0 540 s/(.)\1/$1/g; # add /s to include newlines
541
542Here's a solution that turns "abbcccd" to "abcd":
543
544 y///cs; # y == tr, but shorter :-)
68dc0745 545
546=head2 How do I expand function calls in a string?
547
548This is documented in L<perlref>. In general, this is fraught with
549quoting and readability problems, but it is possible. To interpolate
5a964f20 550a subroutine call (in list context) into a string:
68dc0745 551
552 print "My sub returned @{[mysub(1,2,3)]} that time.\n";
553
92c2ed05 554See also ``How can I expand variables in text strings?'' in this
555section of the FAQ.
46fc3d4c 556
68dc0745 557=head2 How do I find matching/nesting anything?
558
92c2ed05 559This isn't something that can be done in one regular expression, no
560matter how complicated. To find something between two single
561characters, a pattern like C</x([^x]*)x/> will get the intervening
562bits in $1. For multiple ones, then something more like
563C</alpha(.*?)omega/> would be needed. But none of these deals with
f0f835c2 564nested patterns. For balanced expressions using C<(>, C<{>, C<[>
565or C<< < >> as delimiters, use the CPAN module Regexp::Common, or see
566L<perlre/(??{ code })>. For other cases, you'll have to write a parser.
92c2ed05 567
568If you are serious about writing a parser, there are a number of
6a2af475 569modules or oddities that will make your life a lot easier. There are
570the CPAN modules Parse::RecDescent, Parse::Yapp, and Text::Balanced;
83df6a1d 571and the byacc program. Starting from perl 5.8 the Text::Balanced
572is part of the standard distribution.
68dc0745 573
92c2ed05 574One simple destructive, inside-out approach that you might try is to
575pull out the smallest nesting parts one at a time:
5a964f20 576
d92eb7b0 577 while (s/BEGIN((?:(?!BEGIN)(?!END).)*)END//gs) {
5a964f20 578 # do something with $1
579 }
580
65acb1b1 581A more complicated and sneaky approach is to make Perl's regular
582expression engine do it for you. This is courtesy Dean Inada, and
583rather has the nature of an Obfuscated Perl Contest entry, but it
584really does work:
585
586 # $_ contains the string to parse
587 # BEGIN and END are the opening and closing markers for the
588 # nested text.
c47ff5f1 589
65acb1b1 590 @( = ('(','');
591 @) = (')','');
592 ($re=$_)=~s/((BEGIN)|(END)|.)/$)[!$3]\Q$1\E$([!$2]/gs;
5ed30e05 593 @$ = (eval{/$re/},$@!~/unmatched/i);
65acb1b1 594 print join("\n",@$[0..$#$]) if( $$[-1] );
595
68dc0745 596=head2 How do I reverse a string?
597
5a964f20 598Use reverse() in scalar context, as documented in
68dc0745 599L<perlfunc/reverse>.
600
601 $reversed = reverse $string;
602
603=head2 How do I expand tabs in a string?
604
5a964f20 605You can do it yourself:
68dc0745 606
607 1 while $string =~ s/\t+/' ' x (length($&) * 8 - length($`) % 8)/e;
608
87275199 609Or you can just use the Text::Tabs module (part of the standard Perl
68dc0745 610distribution).
611
612 use Text::Tabs;
613 @expanded_lines = expand(@lines_with_tabs);
614
615=head2 How do I reformat a paragraph?
616
87275199 617Use Text::Wrap (part of the standard Perl distribution):
68dc0745 618
619 use Text::Wrap;
620 print wrap("\t", ' ', @paragraphs);
621
92c2ed05 622The paragraphs you give to Text::Wrap should not contain embedded
46fc3d4c 623newlines. Text::Wrap doesn't justify the lines (flush-right).
624
bc06af74 625Or use the CPAN module Text::Autoformat. Formatting files can be easily
626done by making a shell alias, like so:
627
628 alias fmt="perl -i -MText::Autoformat -n0777 \
629 -e 'print autoformat $_, {all=>1}' $*"
630
631See the documentation for Text::Autoformat to appreciate its many
632capabilities.
633
49d635f9 634=head2 How can I access or change N characters of a string?
68dc0745 635
49d635f9 636You can access the first characters of a string with substr().
637To get the first character, for example, start at position 0
638and grab the string of length 1.
68dc0745 639
68dc0745 640
49d635f9 641 $string = "Just another Perl Hacker";
642 $first_char = substr( $string, 0, 1 ); # 'J'
68dc0745 643
49d635f9 644To change part of a string, you can use the optional fourth
645argument which is the replacement string.
68dc0745 646
49d635f9 647 substr( $string, 13, 4, "Perl 5.8.0" );
648
649You can also use substr() as an lvalue.
68dc0745 650
49d635f9 651 substr( $string, 13, 4 ) = "Perl 5.8.0";
652
68dc0745 653=head2 How do I change the Nth occurrence of something?
654
92c2ed05 655You have to keep track of N yourself. For example, let's say you want
656to change the fifth occurrence of C<"whoever"> or C<"whomever"> into
d92eb7b0 657C<"whosoever"> or C<"whomsoever">, case insensitively. These
658all assume that $_ contains the string to be altered.
68dc0745 659
660 $count = 0;
661 s{((whom?)ever)}{
662 ++$count == 5 # is it the 5th?
663 ? "${2}soever" # yes, swap
664 : $1 # renege and leave it there
d92eb7b0 665 }ige;
68dc0745 666
5a964f20 667In the more general case, you can use the C</g> modifier in a C<while>
668loop, keeping count of matches.
669
670 $WANT = 3;
671 $count = 0;
d92eb7b0 672 $_ = "One fish two fish red fish blue fish";
5a964f20 673 while (/(\w+)\s+fish\b/gi) {
674 if (++$count == $WANT) {
675 print "The third fish is a $1 one.\n";
5a964f20 676 }
677 }
678
92c2ed05 679That prints out: C<"The third fish is a red one."> You can also use a
5a964f20 680repetition count and repeated pattern like this:
681
682 /(?:\w+\s+fish\s+){2}(\w+)\s+fish/i;
683
68dc0745 684=head2 How can I count the number of occurrences of a substring within a string?
685
a6dd486b 686There are a number of ways, with varying efficiency. If you want a
68dc0745 687count of a certain single character (X) within a string, you can use the
688C<tr///> function like so:
689
368c9434 690 $string = "ThisXlineXhasXsomeXx'sXinXit";
68dc0745 691 $count = ($string =~ tr/X//);
d92eb7b0 692 print "There are $count X characters in the string";
68dc0745 693
694This is fine if you are just looking for a single character. However,
695if you are trying to count multiple character substrings within a
696larger string, C<tr///> won't work. What you can do is wrap a while()
697loop around a global pattern match. For example, let's count negative
698integers:
699
700 $string = "-9 55 48 -2 23 -76 4 14 -44";
701 while ($string =~ /-\d+/g) { $count++ }
702 print "There are $count negative numbers in the string";
703
881bdbd4 704Another version uses a global match in list context, then assigns the
705result to a scalar, producing a count of the number of matches.
706
707 $count = () = $string =~ /-\d+/g;
708
68dc0745 709=head2 How do I capitalize all the words on one line?
710
711To make the first letter of each word upper case:
3fe9a6f1 712
68dc0745 713 $line =~ s/\b(\w)/\U$1/g;
714
46fc3d4c 715This has the strange effect of turning "C<don't do it>" into "C<Don'T
a6dd486b 716Do It>". Sometimes you might want this. Other times you might need a
24f1ba9b 717more thorough solution (Suggested by brian d foy):
46fc3d4c 718
719 $string =~ s/ (
720 (^\w) #at the beginning of the line
721 | # or
722 (\s\w) #preceded by whitespace
723 )
724 /\U$1/xg;
725 $string =~ /([\w']+)/\u\L$1/g;
726
68dc0745 727To make the whole line upper case:
3fe9a6f1 728
68dc0745 729 $line = uc($line);
730
731To force each word to be lower case, with the first letter upper case:
3fe9a6f1 732
68dc0745 733 $line =~ s/(\w+)/\u\L$1/g;
734
5a964f20 735You can (and probably should) enable locale awareness of those
736characters by placing a C<use locale> pragma in your program.
92c2ed05 737See L<perllocale> for endless details on locales.
5a964f20 738
65acb1b1 739This is sometimes referred to as putting something into "title
d92eb7b0 740case", but that's not quite accurate. Consider the proper
65acb1b1 741capitalization of the movie I<Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to
742Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb>, for example.
743
49d635f9 744=head2 How can I split a [character] delimited string except when inside [character]?
68dc0745 745
49d635f9 746Several modules can handle this sort of pasing---Text::Balanced,
747Text::CVS, Text::CVS_XS, and Text::ParseWords, among others.
748
749Take the example case of trying to split a string that is
750comma-separated into its different fields. You can't use C<split(/,/)>
751because you shouldn't split if the comma is inside quotes. For
752example, take a data line like this:
68dc0745 753
754 SAR001,"","Cimetrix, Inc","Bob Smith","CAM",N,8,1,0,7,"Error, Core Dumped"
755
756Due to the restriction of the quotes, this is a fairly complex
49d635f9 757problem. Thankfully, we have Jeffrey Friedl, author of
758I<Mastering Regular Expressions>, to handle these for us. He
68dc0745 759suggests (assuming your string is contained in $text):
760
761 @new = ();
762 push(@new, $+) while $text =~ m{
763 "([^\"\\]*(?:\\.[^\"\\]*)*)",? # groups the phrase inside the quotes
764 | ([^,]+),?
765 | ,
766 }gx;
767 push(@new, undef) if substr($text,-1,1) eq ',';
768
46fc3d4c 769If you want to represent quotation marks inside a
770quotation-mark-delimited field, escape them with backslashes (eg,
49d635f9 771C<"like \"this\"">.
46fc3d4c 772
87275199 773Alternatively, the Text::ParseWords module (part of the standard Perl
68dc0745 774distribution) lets you say:
775
776 use Text::ParseWords;
777 @new = quotewords(",", 0, $text);
778
a6dd486b 779There's also a Text::CSV (Comma-Separated Values) module on CPAN.
65acb1b1 780
68dc0745 781=head2 How do I strip blank space from the beginning/end of a string?
782
a6dd486b 783Although the simplest approach would seem to be
68dc0745 784
785 $string =~ s/^\s*(.*?)\s*$/$1/;
786
a6dd486b 787not only is this unnecessarily slow and destructive, it also fails with
d92eb7b0 788embedded newlines. It is much faster to do this operation in two steps:
68dc0745 789
790 $string =~ s/^\s+//;
791 $string =~ s/\s+$//;
792
793Or more nicely written as:
794
795 for ($string) {
796 s/^\s+//;
797 s/\s+$//;
798 }
799
5e3006a4 800This idiom takes advantage of the C<foreach> loop's aliasing
5a964f20 801behavior to factor out common code. You can do this
802on several strings at once, or arrays, or even the
d92eb7b0 803values of a hash if you use a slice:
5a964f20 804
805 # trim whitespace in the scalar, the array,
806 # and all the values in the hash
807 foreach ($scalar, @array, @hash{keys %hash}) {
808 s/^\s+//;
809 s/\s+$//;
810 }
811
65acb1b1 812=head2 How do I pad a string with blanks or pad a number with zeroes?
813
d92eb7b0 814(This answer contributed by Uri Guttman, with kibitzing from
815Bart Lateur.)
65acb1b1 816
817In the following examples, C<$pad_len> is the length to which you wish
d92eb7b0 818to pad the string, C<$text> or C<$num> contains the string to be padded,
819and C<$pad_char> contains the padding character. You can use a single
820character string constant instead of the C<$pad_char> variable if you
821know what it is in advance. And in the same way you can use an integer in
822place of C<$pad_len> if you know the pad length in advance.
65acb1b1 823
d92eb7b0 824The simplest method uses the C<sprintf> function. It can pad on the left
825or right with blanks and on the left with zeroes and it will not
826truncate the result. The C<pack> function can only pad strings on the
827right with blanks and it will truncate the result to a maximum length of
828C<$pad_len>.
65acb1b1 829
d92eb7b0 830 # Left padding a string with blanks (no truncation):
831 $padded = sprintf("%${pad_len}s", $text);
65acb1b1 832
d92eb7b0 833 # Right padding a string with blanks (no truncation):
834 $padded = sprintf("%-${pad_len}s", $text);
65acb1b1 835
d92eb7b0 836 # Left padding a number with 0 (no truncation):
837 $padded = sprintf("%0${pad_len}d", $num);
65acb1b1 838
d92eb7b0 839 # Right padding a string with blanks using pack (will truncate):
840 $padded = pack("A$pad_len",$text);
65acb1b1 841
d92eb7b0 842If you need to pad with a character other than blank or zero you can use
843one of the following methods. They all generate a pad string with the
844C<x> operator and combine that with C<$text>. These methods do
845not truncate C<$text>.
65acb1b1 846
d92eb7b0 847Left and right padding with any character, creating a new string:
65acb1b1 848
d92eb7b0 849 $padded = $pad_char x ( $pad_len - length( $text ) ) . $text;
850 $padded = $text . $pad_char x ( $pad_len - length( $text ) );
65acb1b1 851
d92eb7b0 852Left and right padding with any character, modifying C<$text> directly:
65acb1b1 853
d92eb7b0 854 substr( $text, 0, 0 ) = $pad_char x ( $pad_len - length( $text ) );
855 $text .= $pad_char x ( $pad_len - length( $text ) );
65acb1b1 856
68dc0745 857=head2 How do I extract selected columns from a string?
858
859Use substr() or unpack(), both documented in L<perlfunc>.
5a964f20 860If you prefer thinking in terms of columns instead of widths,
861you can use this kind of thing:
862
863 # determine the unpack format needed to split Linux ps output
864 # arguments are cut columns
865 my $fmt = cut2fmt(8, 14, 20, 26, 30, 34, 41, 47, 59, 63, 67, 72);
866
867 sub cut2fmt {
868 my(@positions) = @_;
869 my $template = '';
870 my $lastpos = 1;
871 for my $place (@positions) {
872 $template .= "A" . ($place - $lastpos) . " ";
873 $lastpos = $place;
874 }
875 $template .= "A*";
876 return $template;
877 }
68dc0745 878
879=head2 How do I find the soundex value of a string?
880
87275199 881Use the standard Text::Soundex module distributed with Perl.
a6dd486b 882Before you do so, you may want to determine whether `soundex' is in
d92eb7b0 883fact what you think it is. Knuth's soundex algorithm compresses words
884into a small space, and so it does not necessarily distinguish between
885two words which you might want to appear separately. For example, the
886last names `Knuth' and `Kant' are both mapped to the soundex code K530.
887If Text::Soundex does not do what you are looking for, you might want
888to consider the String::Approx module available at CPAN.
68dc0745 889
890=head2 How can I expand variables in text strings?
891
892Let's assume that you have a string like:
893
894 $text = 'this has a $foo in it and a $bar';
5a964f20 895
896If those were both global variables, then this would
897suffice:
898
65acb1b1 899 $text =~ s/\$(\w+)/${$1}/g; # no /e needed
68dc0745 900
5a964f20 901But since they are probably lexicals, or at least, they could
902be, you'd have to do this:
68dc0745 903
904 $text =~ s/(\$\w+)/$1/eeg;
65acb1b1 905 die if $@; # needed /ee, not /e
68dc0745 906
5a964f20 907It's probably better in the general case to treat those
908variables as entries in some special hash. For example:
909
910 %user_defs = (
911 foo => 23,
912 bar => 19,
913 );
914 $text =~ s/\$(\w+)/$user_defs{$1}/g;
68dc0745 915
92c2ed05 916See also ``How do I expand function calls in a string?'' in this section
46fc3d4c 917of the FAQ.
918
68dc0745 919=head2 What's wrong with always quoting "$vars"?
920
a6dd486b 921The problem is that those double-quotes force stringification--
922coercing numbers and references into strings--even when you
923don't want them to be strings. Think of it this way: double-quote
65acb1b1 924expansion is used to produce new strings. If you already
925have a string, why do you need more?
68dc0745 926
927If you get used to writing odd things like these:
928
929 print "$var"; # BAD
930 $new = "$old"; # BAD
931 somefunc("$var"); # BAD
932
933You'll be in trouble. Those should (in 99.8% of the cases) be
934the simpler and more direct:
935
936 print $var;
937 $new = $old;
938 somefunc($var);
939
940Otherwise, besides slowing you down, you're going to break code when
941the thing in the scalar is actually neither a string nor a number, but
942a reference:
943
944 func(\@array);
945 sub func {
946 my $aref = shift;
947 my $oref = "$aref"; # WRONG
948 }
949
950You can also get into subtle problems on those few operations in Perl
951that actually do care about the difference between a string and a
952number, such as the magical C<++> autoincrement operator or the
953syscall() function.
954
5a964f20 955Stringification also destroys arrays.
956
957 @lines = `command`;
958 print "@lines"; # WRONG - extra blanks
959 print @lines; # right
960
c47ff5f1 961=head2 Why don't my <<HERE documents work?
68dc0745 962
963Check for these three things:
964
965=over 4
966
967=item 1. There must be no space after the << part.
968
969=item 2. There (probably) should be a semicolon at the end.
970
971=item 3. You can't (easily) have any space in front of the tag.
972
973=back
974
5a964f20 975If you want to indent the text in the here document, you
976can do this:
977
978 # all in one
979 ($VAR = <<HERE_TARGET) =~ s/^\s+//gm;
980 your text
981 goes here
982 HERE_TARGET
983
984But the HERE_TARGET must still be flush against the margin.
985If you want that indented also, you'll have to quote
986in the indentation.
987
988 ($quote = <<' FINIS') =~ s/^\s+//gm;
989 ...we will have peace, when you and all your works have
990 perished--and the works of your dark master to whom you
991 would deliver us. You are a liar, Saruman, and a corrupter
992 of men's hearts. --Theoden in /usr/src/perl/taint.c
993 FINIS
83ded9ee 994 $quote =~ s/\s+--/\n--/;
5a964f20 995
996A nice general-purpose fixer-upper function for indented here documents
997follows. It expects to be called with a here document as its argument.
998It looks to see whether each line begins with a common substring, and
a6dd486b 999if so, strips that substring off. Otherwise, it takes the amount of leading
1000whitespace found on the first line and removes that much off each
5a964f20 1001subsequent line.
1002
1003 sub fix {
1004 local $_ = shift;
a6dd486b 1005 my ($white, $leader); # common whitespace and common leading string
5a964f20 1006 if (/^\s*(?:([^\w\s]+)(\s*).*\n)(?:\s*\1\2?.*\n)+$/) {
1007 ($white, $leader) = ($2, quotemeta($1));
1008 } else {
1009 ($white, $leader) = (/^(\s+)/, '');
1010 }
1011 s/^\s*?$leader(?:$white)?//gm;
1012 return $_;
1013 }
1014
c8db1d39 1015This works with leading special strings, dynamically determined:
5a964f20 1016
1017 $remember_the_main = fix<<' MAIN_INTERPRETER_LOOP';
1018 @@@ int
1019 @@@ runops() {
1020 @@@ SAVEI32(runlevel);
1021 @@@ runlevel++;
d92eb7b0 1022 @@@ while ( op = (*op->op_ppaddr)() );
5a964f20 1023 @@@ TAINT_NOT;
1024 @@@ return 0;
1025 @@@ }
1026 MAIN_INTERPRETER_LOOP
1027
a6dd486b 1028Or with a fixed amount of leading whitespace, with remaining
5a964f20 1029indentation correctly preserved:
1030
1031 $poem = fix<<EVER_ON_AND_ON;
1032 Now far ahead the Road has gone,
1033 And I must follow, if I can,
1034 Pursuing it with eager feet,
1035 Until it joins some larger way
1036 Where many paths and errands meet.
1037 And whither then? I cannot say.
1038 --Bilbo in /usr/src/perl/pp_ctl.c
1039 EVER_ON_AND_ON
1040
68dc0745 1041=head1 Data: Arrays
1042
65acb1b1 1043=head2 What is the difference between a list and an array?
1044
1045An array has a changeable length. A list does not. An array is something
1046you can push or pop, while a list is a set of values. Some people make
1047the distinction that a list is a value while an array is a variable.
1048Subroutines are passed and return lists, you put things into list
1049context, you initialize arrays with lists, and you foreach() across
1050a list. C<@> variables are arrays, anonymous arrays are arrays, arrays
1051in scalar context behave like the number of elements in them, subroutines
a6dd486b 1052access their arguments through the array C<@_>, and push/pop/shift only work
65acb1b1 1053on arrays.
1054
1055As a side note, there's no such thing as a list in scalar context.
1056When you say
1057
1058 $scalar = (2, 5, 7, 9);
1059
d92eb7b0 1060you're using the comma operator in scalar context, so it uses the scalar
1061comma operator. There never was a list there at all! This causes the
1062last value to be returned: 9.
65acb1b1 1063
68dc0745 1064=head2 What is the difference between $array[1] and @array[1]?
1065
a6dd486b 1066The former is a scalar value; the latter an array slice, making
68dc0745 1067it a list with one (scalar) value. You should use $ when you want a
1068scalar value (most of the time) and @ when you want a list with one
1069scalar value in it (very, very rarely; nearly never, in fact).
1070
1071Sometimes it doesn't make a difference, but sometimes it does.
1072For example, compare:
1073
1074 $good[0] = `some program that outputs several lines`;
1075
1076with
1077
1078 @bad[0] = `same program that outputs several lines`;
1079
9f1b1f2d 1080The C<use warnings> pragma and the B<-w> flag will warn you about these
1081matters.
68dc0745 1082
d92eb7b0 1083=head2 How can I remove duplicate elements from a list or array?
68dc0745 1084
1085There are several possible ways, depending on whether the array is
1086ordered and whether you wish to preserve the ordering.
1087
1088=over 4
1089
551e1d92 1090=item a)
1091
1092If @in is sorted, and you want @out to be sorted:
5a964f20 1093(this assumes all true values in the array)
68dc0745 1094
a4341a65 1095 $prev = "not equal to $in[0]";
3bc5ef3e 1096 @out = grep($_ ne $prev && ($prev = $_, 1), @in);
68dc0745 1097
c8db1d39 1098This is nice in that it doesn't use much extra memory, simulating
3bc5ef3e 1099uniq(1)'s behavior of removing only adjacent duplicates. The ", 1"
1100guarantees that the expression is true (so that grep picks it up)
1101even if the $_ is 0, "", or undef.
68dc0745 1102
551e1d92 1103=item b)
1104
1105If you don't know whether @in is sorted:
68dc0745 1106
1107 undef %saw;
1108 @out = grep(!$saw{$_}++, @in);
1109
551e1d92 1110=item c)
1111
1112Like (b), but @in contains only small integers:
68dc0745 1113
1114 @out = grep(!$saw[$_]++, @in);
1115
551e1d92 1116=item d)
1117
1118A way to do (b) without any loops or greps:
68dc0745 1119
1120 undef %saw;
1121 @saw{@in} = ();
1122 @out = sort keys %saw; # remove sort if undesired
1123
551e1d92 1124=item e)
1125
1126Like (d), but @in contains only small positive integers:
68dc0745 1127
1128 undef @ary;
1129 @ary[@in] = @in;
87275199 1130 @out = grep {defined} @ary;
68dc0745 1131
1132=back
1133
65acb1b1 1134But perhaps you should have been using a hash all along, eh?
1135
ddbc1f16 1136=head2 How can I tell whether a certain element is contained in a list or array?
5a964f20 1137
1138Hearing the word "in" is an I<in>dication that you probably should have
1139used a hash, not a list or array, to store your data. Hashes are
1140designed to answer this question quickly and efficiently. Arrays aren't.
68dc0745 1141
5a964f20 1142That being said, there are several ways to approach this. If you
1143are going to make this query many times over arbitrary string values,
881bdbd4 1144the fastest way is probably to invert the original array and maintain a
1145hash whose keys are the first array's values.
68dc0745 1146
1147 @blues = qw/azure cerulean teal turquoise lapis-lazuli/;
881bdbd4 1148 %is_blue = ();
68dc0745 1149 for (@blues) { $is_blue{$_} = 1 }
1150
1151Now you can check whether $is_blue{$some_color}. It might have been a
1152good idea to keep the blues all in a hash in the first place.
1153
1154If the values are all small integers, you could use a simple indexed
1155array. This kind of an array will take up less space:
1156
1157 @primes = (2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31);
881bdbd4 1158 @is_tiny_prime = ();
d92eb7b0 1159 for (@primes) { $is_tiny_prime[$_] = 1 }
1160 # or simply @istiny_prime[@primes] = (1) x @primes;
68dc0745 1161
1162Now you check whether $is_tiny_prime[$some_number].
1163
1164If the values in question are integers instead of strings, you can save
1165quite a lot of space by using bit strings instead:
1166
1167 @articles = ( 1..10, 150..2000, 2017 );
1168 undef $read;
7b8d334a 1169 for (@articles) { vec($read,$_,1) = 1 }
68dc0745 1170
1171Now check whether C<vec($read,$n,1)> is true for some C<$n>.
1172
1173Please do not use
1174
a6dd486b 1175 ($is_there) = grep $_ eq $whatever, @array;
68dc0745 1176
1177or worse yet
1178
a6dd486b 1179 ($is_there) = grep /$whatever/, @array;
68dc0745 1180
1181These are slow (checks every element even if the first matches),
1182inefficient (same reason), and potentially buggy (what if there are
d92eb7b0 1183regex characters in $whatever?). If you're only testing once, then
65acb1b1 1184use:
1185
1186 $is_there = 0;
1187 foreach $elt (@array) {
1188 if ($elt eq $elt_to_find) {
1189 $is_there = 1;
1190 last;
1191 }
1192 }
1193 if ($is_there) { ... }
68dc0745 1194
1195=head2 How do I compute the difference of two arrays? How do I compute the intersection of two arrays?
1196
1197Use a hash. Here's code to do both and more. It assumes that
1198each element is unique in a given array:
1199
1200 @union = @intersection = @difference = ();
1201 %count = ();
1202 foreach $element (@array1, @array2) { $count{$element}++ }
1203 foreach $element (keys %count) {
1204 push @union, $element;
1205 push @{ $count{$element} > 1 ? \@intersection : \@difference }, $element;
1206 }
1207
d92eb7b0 1208Note that this is the I<symmetric difference>, that is, all elements in
a6dd486b 1209either A or in B but not in both. Think of it as an xor operation.
d92eb7b0 1210
65acb1b1 1211=head2 How do I test whether two arrays or hashes are equal?
1212
1213The following code works for single-level arrays. It uses a stringwise
1214comparison, and does not distinguish defined versus undefined empty
1215strings. Modify if you have other needs.
1216
1217 $are_equal = compare_arrays(\@frogs, \@toads);
1218
1219 sub compare_arrays {
1220 my ($first, $second) = @_;
9f1b1f2d 1221 no warnings; # silence spurious -w undef complaints
65acb1b1 1222 return 0 unless @$first == @$second;
1223 for (my $i = 0; $i < @$first; $i++) {
1224 return 0 if $first->[$i] ne $second->[$i];
1225 }
1226 return 1;
1227 }
1228
1229For multilevel structures, you may wish to use an approach more
1230like this one. It uses the CPAN module FreezeThaw:
1231
1232 use FreezeThaw qw(cmpStr);
1233 @a = @b = ( "this", "that", [ "more", "stuff" ] );
1234
1235 printf "a and b contain %s arrays\n",
1236 cmpStr(\@a, \@b) == 0
1237 ? "the same"
1238 : "different";
1239
1240This approach also works for comparing hashes. Here
1241we'll demonstrate two different answers:
1242
1243 use FreezeThaw qw(cmpStr cmpStrHard);
1244
1245 %a = %b = ( "this" => "that", "extra" => [ "more", "stuff" ] );
1246 $a{EXTRA} = \%b;
1247 $b{EXTRA} = \%a;
1248
1249 printf "a and b contain %s hashes\n",
1250 cmpStr(\%a, \%b) == 0 ? "the same" : "different";
1251
1252 printf "a and b contain %s hashes\n",
1253 cmpStrHard(\%a, \%b) == 0 ? "the same" : "different";
1254
1255
1256The first reports that both those the hashes contain the same data,
1257while the second reports that they do not. Which you prefer is left as
1258an exercise to the reader.
1259
68dc0745 1260=head2 How do I find the first array element for which a condition is true?
1261
49d635f9 1262To find the first array element which satisfies a condition, you can
1263use the first() function in the List::Util module, which comes with
1264Perl 5.8. This example finds the first element that contains "Perl".
1265
1266 use List::Util qw(first);
1267
1268 my $element = first { /Perl/ } @array;
1269
1270If you cannot use List::Util, you can make your own loop to do the
1271same thing. Once you find the element, you stop the loop with last.
1272
1273 my $found;
1274 foreach my $element ( @array )
1275 {
1276 if( /Perl/ ) { $found = $element; last }
1277 }
1278
1279If you want the array index, you can iterate through the indices
1280and check the array element at each index until you find one
1281that satisfies the condition.
1282
1283 my( $found, $i ) = ( undef, -1 );
1284 for( $i = 0; $i < @array; $i++ )
1285 {
1286 if( $array[$i] =~ /Perl/ )
1287 {
1288 $found = $array[$i];
1289 $index = $i;
1290 last;
1291 }
68dc0745 1292 }
68dc0745 1293
1294=head2 How do I handle linked lists?
1295
1296In general, you usually don't need a linked list in Perl, since with
1297regular arrays, you can push and pop or shift and unshift at either end,
5a964f20 1298or you can use splice to add and/or remove arbitrary number of elements at
87275199 1299arbitrary points. Both pop and shift are both O(1) operations on Perl's
5a964f20 1300dynamic arrays. In the absence of shifts and pops, push in general
1301needs to reallocate on the order every log(N) times, and unshift will
1302need to copy pointers each time.
68dc0745 1303
1304If you really, really wanted, you could use structures as described in
1305L<perldsc> or L<perltoot> and do just what the algorithm book tells you
65acb1b1 1306to do. For example, imagine a list node like this:
1307
1308 $node = {
1309 VALUE => 42,
1310 LINK => undef,
1311 };
1312
1313You could walk the list this way:
1314
1315 print "List: ";
1316 for ($node = $head; $node; $node = $node->{LINK}) {
1317 print $node->{VALUE}, " ";
1318 }
1319 print "\n";
1320
a6dd486b 1321You could add to the list this way:
65acb1b1 1322
1323 my ($head, $tail);
1324 $tail = append($head, 1); # grow a new head
1325 for $value ( 2 .. 10 ) {
1326 $tail = append($tail, $value);
1327 }
1328
1329 sub append {
1330 my($list, $value) = @_;
1331 my $node = { VALUE => $value };
1332 if ($list) {
1333 $node->{LINK} = $list->{LINK};
1334 $list->{LINK} = $node;
1335 } else {
1336 $_[0] = $node; # replace caller's version
1337 }
1338 return $node;
1339 }
1340
1341But again, Perl's built-in are virtually always good enough.
68dc0745 1342
1343=head2 How do I handle circular lists?
1344
1345Circular lists could be handled in the traditional fashion with linked
1346lists, or you could just do something like this with an array:
1347
1348 unshift(@array, pop(@array)); # the last shall be first
1349 push(@array, shift(@array)); # and vice versa
1350
1351=head2 How do I shuffle an array randomly?
1352
45bbf655 1353If you either have Perl 5.8.0 or later installed, or if you have
1354Scalar-List-Utils 1.03 or later installed, you can say:
1355
f05bbc40 1356 use List::Util 'shuffle';
45bbf655 1357
1358 @shuffled = shuffle(@list);
1359
f05bbc40 1360If not, you can use a Fisher-Yates shuffle.
5a964f20 1361
5a964f20 1362 sub fisher_yates_shuffle {
cc30d1a7 1363 my $deck = shift; # $deck is a reference to an array
1364 my $i = @$deck;
f05bbc40 1365 while ($i--) {
5a964f20 1366 my $j = int rand ($i+1);
cc30d1a7 1367 @$deck[$i,$j] = @$deck[$j,$i];
5a964f20 1368 }
1369 }
1370
cc30d1a7 1371 # shuffle my mpeg collection
1372 #
1373 my @mpeg = <audio/*/*.mp3>;
1374 fisher_yates_shuffle( \@mpeg ); # randomize @mpeg in place
1375 print @mpeg;
5a964f20 1376
45bbf655 1377Note that the above implementation shuffles an array in place,
1378unlike the List::Util::shuffle() which takes a list and returns
1379a new shuffled list.
1380
d92eb7b0 1381You've probably seen shuffling algorithms that work using splice,
a6dd486b 1382randomly picking another element to swap the current element with
68dc0745 1383
1384 srand;
1385 @new = ();
1386 @old = 1 .. 10; # just a demo
1387 while (@old) {
1388 push(@new, splice(@old, rand @old, 1));
1389 }
1390
5a964f20 1391This is bad because splice is already O(N), and since you do it N times,
1392you just invented a quadratic algorithm; that is, O(N**2). This does
1393not scale, although Perl is so efficient that you probably won't notice
1394this until you have rather largish arrays.
68dc0745 1395
1396=head2 How do I process/modify each element of an array?
1397
1398Use C<for>/C<foreach>:
1399
1400 for (@lines) {
5a964f20 1401 s/foo/bar/; # change that word
1402 y/XZ/ZX/; # swap those letters
68dc0745 1403 }
1404
1405Here's another; let's compute spherical volumes:
1406
5a964f20 1407 for (@volumes = @radii) { # @volumes has changed parts
68dc0745 1408 $_ **= 3;
1409 $_ *= (4/3) * 3.14159; # this will be constant folded
1410 }
49d635f9 1411
1412which can also be done with map() which is made to transform
1413one list into another:
1414
1415 @volumes = map {$_ ** 3 * (4/3) * 3.14159} @radii;
68dc0745 1416
76817d6d 1417If you want to do the same thing to modify the values of the
1418hash, you can use the C<values> function. As of Perl 5.6
1419the values are not copied, so if you modify $orbit (in this
1420case), you modify the value.
5a964f20 1421
76817d6d 1422 for $orbit ( values %orbits ) {
5a964f20 1423 ($orbit **= 3) *= (4/3) * 3.14159;
1424 }
818c4caa 1425
76817d6d 1426Prior to perl 5.6 C<values> returned copies of the values,
1427so older perl code often contains constructions such as
1428C<@orbits{keys %orbits}> instead of C<values %orbits> where
1429the hash is to be modified.
818c4caa 1430
68dc0745 1431=head2 How do I select a random element from an array?
1432
1433Use the rand() function (see L<perlfunc/rand>):
1434
5a964f20 1435 # at the top of the program:
68dc0745 1436 srand; # not needed for 5.004 and later
5a964f20 1437
1438 # then later on
68dc0745 1439 $index = rand @array;
1440 $element = $array[$index];
1441
5a964f20 1442Make sure you I<only call srand once per program, if then>.
1443If you are calling it more than once (such as before each
1444call to rand), you're almost certainly doing something wrong.
1445
68dc0745 1446=head2 How do I permute N elements of a list?
1447
49d635f9 1448Use the List::Permutor module on CPAN. If the list is
1449actually an array, try the Algorithm::Permute module (also
1450on CPAN). It's written in XS code and is very efficient.
1451
1452 use Algorithm::Permute;
1453 my @array = 'a'..'d';
1454 my $p_iterator = Algorithm::Permute->new ( \@array );
1455 while (my @perm = $p_iterator->next) {
1456 print "next permutation: (@perm)\n";
1457 }
1458
1459Here's a little program that generates all permutations of
1460all the words on each line of input. The algorithm embodied
1461in the permute() function is discussed in Volume 4 (still
1462unpublished) of Knuth's I<The Art of Computer Programming>
1463and will work on any list:
1464
1465 #!/usr/bin/perl -n
1466 # Fischer-Kause ordered permutation generator
1467
1468 sub permute (&@) {
1469 my $code = shift;
1470 my @idx = 0..$#_;
1471 while ( $code->(@_[@idx]) ) {
1472 my $p = $#idx;
1473 --$p while $idx[$p-1] > $idx[$p];
1474 my $q = $p or return;
1475 push @idx, reverse splice @idx, $p;
1476 ++$q while $idx[$p-1] > $idx[$q];
1477 @idx[$p-1,$q]=@idx[$q,$p-1];
1478 }
68dc0745 1479 }
68dc0745 1480
49d635f9 1481 permute {print"@_\n"} split;
b8d2732a 1482
68dc0745 1483=head2 How do I sort an array by (anything)?
1484
1485Supply a comparison function to sort() (described in L<perlfunc/sort>):
1486
1487 @list = sort { $a <=> $b } @list;
1488
1489The default sort function is cmp, string comparison, which would
c47ff5f1 1490sort C<(1, 2, 10)> into C<(1, 10, 2)>. C<< <=> >>, used above, is
68dc0745 1491the numerical comparison operator.
1492
1493If you have a complicated function needed to pull out the part you
1494want to sort on, then don't do it inside the sort function. Pull it
1495out first, because the sort BLOCK can be called many times for the
1496same element. Here's an example of how to pull out the first word
1497after the first number on each item, and then sort those words
1498case-insensitively.
1499
1500 @idx = ();
1501 for (@data) {
1502 ($item) = /\d+\s*(\S+)/;
1503 push @idx, uc($item);
1504 }
1505 @sorted = @data[ sort { $idx[$a] cmp $idx[$b] } 0 .. $#idx ];
1506
a6dd486b 1507which could also be written this way, using a trick
68dc0745 1508that's come to be known as the Schwartzian Transform:
1509
1510 @sorted = map { $_->[0] }
1511 sort { $a->[1] cmp $b->[1] }
d92eb7b0 1512 map { [ $_, uc( (/\d+\s*(\S+)/)[0]) ] } @data;
68dc0745 1513
1514If you need to sort on several fields, the following paradigm is useful.
1515
1516 @sorted = sort { field1($a) <=> field1($b) ||
1517 field2($a) cmp field2($b) ||
1518 field3($a) cmp field3($b)
1519 } @data;
1520
1521This can be conveniently combined with precalculation of keys as given
1522above.
1523
06a5f41f 1524See the F<sort> artitcle article in the "Far More Than You Ever Wanted
49d635f9 1525To Know" collection in http://www.cpan.org/misc/olddoc/FMTEYEWTK.tgz for
06a5f41f 1526more about this approach.
68dc0745 1527
1528See also the question below on sorting hashes.
1529
1530=head2 How do I manipulate arrays of bits?
1531
1532Use pack() and unpack(), or else vec() and the bitwise operations.
1533
1534For example, this sets $vec to have bit N set if $ints[N] was set:
1535
1536 $vec = '';
1537 foreach(@ints) { vec($vec,$_,1) = 1 }
1538
cc30d1a7 1539Here's how, given a vector in $vec, you can
68dc0745 1540get those bits into your @ints array:
1541
1542 sub bitvec_to_list {
1543 my $vec = shift;
1544 my @ints;
1545 # Find null-byte density then select best algorithm
1546 if ($vec =~ tr/\0// / length $vec > 0.95) {
1547 use integer;
1548 my $i;
1549 # This method is faster with mostly null-bytes
1550 while($vec =~ /[^\0]/g ) {
1551 $i = -9 + 8 * pos $vec;
1552 push @ints, $i if vec($vec, ++$i, 1);
1553 push @ints, $i if vec($vec, ++$i, 1);
1554 push @ints, $i if vec($vec, ++$i, 1);
1555 push @ints, $i if vec($vec, ++$i, 1);
1556 push @ints, $i if vec($vec, ++$i, 1);
1557 push @ints, $i if vec($vec, ++$i, 1);
1558 push @ints, $i if vec($vec, ++$i, 1);
1559 push @ints, $i if vec($vec, ++$i, 1);
1560 }
1561 } else {
1562 # This method is a fast general algorithm
1563 use integer;
1564 my $bits = unpack "b*", $vec;
1565 push @ints, 0 if $bits =~ s/^(\d)// && $1;
1566 push @ints, pos $bits while($bits =~ /1/g);
1567 }
1568 return \@ints;
1569 }
1570
1571This method gets faster the more sparse the bit vector is.
1572(Courtesy of Tim Bunce and Winfried Koenig.)
1573
76817d6d 1574You can make the while loop a lot shorter with this suggestion
1575from Benjamin Goldberg:
1576
1577 while($vec =~ /[^\0]+/g ) {
1578 push @ints, grep vec($vec, $_, 1), $-[0] * 8 .. $+[0] * 8;
1579 }
1580
cc30d1a7 1581Or use the CPAN module Bit::Vector:
1582
1583 $vector = Bit::Vector->new($num_of_bits);
1584 $vector->Index_List_Store(@ints);
1585 @ints = $vector->Index_List_Read();
1586
1587Bit::Vector provides efficient methods for bit vector, sets of small integers
1588and "big int" math.
1589
1590Here's a more extensive illustration using vec():
65acb1b1 1591
1592 # vec demo
1593 $vector = "\xff\x0f\xef\xfe";
1594 print "Ilya's string \\xff\\x0f\\xef\\xfe represents the number ",
1595 unpack("N", $vector), "\n";
1596 $is_set = vec($vector, 23, 1);
1597 print "Its 23rd bit is ", $is_set ? "set" : "clear", ".\n";
1598 pvec($vector);
1599
1600 set_vec(1,1,1);
1601 set_vec(3,1,1);
1602 set_vec(23,1,1);
1603
1604 set_vec(3,1,3);
1605 set_vec(3,2,3);
1606 set_vec(3,4,3);
1607 set_vec(3,4,7);
1608 set_vec(3,8,3);
1609 set_vec(3,8,7);
1610
1611 set_vec(0,32,17);
1612 set_vec(1,32,17);
1613
1614 sub set_vec {
1615 my ($offset, $width, $value) = @_;
1616 my $vector = '';
1617 vec($vector, $offset, $width) = $value;
1618 print "offset=$offset width=$width value=$value\n";
1619 pvec($vector);
1620 }
1621
1622 sub pvec {
1623 my $vector = shift;
1624 my $bits = unpack("b*", $vector);
1625 my $i = 0;
1626 my $BASE = 8;
1627
1628 print "vector length in bytes: ", length($vector), "\n";
1629 @bytes = unpack("A8" x length($vector), $bits);
1630 print "bits are: @bytes\n\n";
1631 }
1632
68dc0745 1633=head2 Why does defined() return true on empty arrays and hashes?
1634
65acb1b1 1635The short story is that you should probably only use defined on scalars or
1636functions, not on aggregates (arrays and hashes). See L<perlfunc/defined>
1637in the 5.004 release or later of Perl for more detail.
68dc0745 1638
1639=head1 Data: Hashes (Associative Arrays)
1640
1641=head2 How do I process an entire hash?
1642
1643Use the each() function (see L<perlfunc/each>) if you don't care
1644whether it's sorted:
1645
5a964f20 1646 while ( ($key, $value) = each %hash) {
68dc0745 1647 print "$key = $value\n";
1648 }
1649
1650If you want it sorted, you'll have to use foreach() on the result of
1651sorting the keys as shown in an earlier question.
1652
1653=head2 What happens if I add or remove keys from a hash while iterating over it?
1654
d92eb7b0 1655Don't do that. :-)
1656
1657[lwall] In Perl 4, you were not allowed to modify a hash at all while
87275199 1658iterating over it. In Perl 5 you can delete from it, but you still
d92eb7b0 1659can't add to it, because that might cause a doubling of the hash table,
1660in which half the entries get copied up to the new top half of the
87275199 1661table, at which point you've totally bamboozled the iterator code.
d92eb7b0 1662Even if the table doesn't double, there's no telling whether your new
1663entry will be inserted before or after the current iterator position.
1664
a6dd486b 1665Either treasure up your changes and make them after the iterator finishes
d92eb7b0 1666or use keys to fetch all the old keys at once, and iterate over the list
1667of keys.
68dc0745 1668
1669=head2 How do I look up a hash element by value?
1670
1671Create a reverse hash:
1672
1673 %by_value = reverse %by_key;
1674 $key = $by_value{$value};
1675
1676That's not particularly efficient. It would be more space-efficient
1677to use:
1678
1679 while (($key, $value) = each %by_key) {
1680 $by_value{$value} = $key;
1681 }
1682
d92eb7b0 1683If your hash could have repeated values, the methods above will only find
1684one of the associated keys. This may or may not worry you. If it does
1685worry you, you can always reverse the hash into a hash of arrays instead:
1686
1687 while (($key, $value) = each %by_key) {
1688 push @{$key_list_by_value{$value}}, $key;
1689 }
68dc0745 1690
1691=head2 How can I know how many entries are in a hash?
1692
1693If you mean how many keys, then all you have to do is
875e5c2f 1694use the keys() function in a scalar context:
68dc0745 1695
875e5c2f 1696 $num_keys = keys %hash;
68dc0745 1697
875e5c2f 1698The keys() function also resets the iterator, which means that you may
1699see strange results if you use this between uses of other hash operators
1700such as each().
68dc0745 1701
1702=head2 How do I sort a hash (optionally by value instead of key)?
1703
1704Internally, hashes are stored in a way that prevents you from imposing
1705an order on key-value pairs. Instead, you have to sort a list of the
1706keys or values:
1707
1708 @keys = sort keys %hash; # sorted by key
1709 @keys = sort {
1710 $hash{$a} cmp $hash{$b}
1711 } keys %hash; # and by value
1712
1713Here we'll do a reverse numeric sort by value, and if two keys are
a6dd486b 1714identical, sort by length of key, or if that fails, by straight ASCII
1715comparison of the keys (well, possibly modified by your locale--see
68dc0745 1716L<perllocale>).
1717
1718 @keys = sort {
1719 $hash{$b} <=> $hash{$a}
1720 ||
1721 length($b) <=> length($a)
1722 ||
1723 $a cmp $b
1724 } keys %hash;
1725
1726=head2 How can I always keep my hash sorted?
1727
1728You can look into using the DB_File module and tie() using the
1729$DB_BTREE hash bindings as documented in L<DB_File/"In Memory Databases">.
5a964f20 1730The Tie::IxHash module from CPAN might also be instructive.
68dc0745 1731
1732=head2 What's the difference between "delete" and "undef" with hashes?
1733
92993692 1734Hashes contain pairs of scalars: the first is the key, the
1735second is the value. The key will be coerced to a string,
1736although the value can be any kind of scalar: string,
1737number, or reference. If a key $key is present in
1738%hash, C<exists($hash{$key})> will return true. The value
1739for a given key can be C<undef>, in which case
1740C<$hash{$key}> will be C<undef> while C<exists $hash{$key}>
1741will return true. This corresponds to (C<$key>, C<undef>)
1742being in the hash.
68dc0745 1743
92993692 1744Pictures help... here's the %hash table:
68dc0745 1745
1746 keys values
1747 +------+------+
1748 | a | 3 |
1749 | x | 7 |
1750 | d | 0 |
1751 | e | 2 |
1752 +------+------+
1753
1754And these conditions hold
1755
92993692 1756 $hash{'a'} is true
1757 $hash{'d'} is false
1758 defined $hash{'d'} is true
1759 defined $hash{'a'} is true
1760 exists $hash{'a'} is true (Perl5 only)
1761 grep ($_ eq 'a', keys %hash) is true
68dc0745 1762
1763If you now say
1764
92993692 1765 undef $hash{'a'}
68dc0745 1766
1767your table now reads:
1768
1769
1770 keys values
1771 +------+------+
1772 | a | undef|
1773 | x | 7 |
1774 | d | 0 |
1775 | e | 2 |
1776 +------+------+
1777
1778and these conditions now hold; changes in caps:
1779
92993692 1780 $hash{'a'} is FALSE
1781 $hash{'d'} is false
1782 defined $hash{'d'} is true
1783 defined $hash{'a'} is FALSE
1784 exists $hash{'a'} is true (Perl5 only)
1785 grep ($_ eq 'a', keys %hash) is true
68dc0745 1786
1787Notice the last two: you have an undef value, but a defined key!
1788
1789Now, consider this:
1790
92993692 1791 delete $hash{'a'}
68dc0745 1792
1793your table now reads:
1794
1795 keys values
1796 +------+------+
1797 | x | 7 |
1798 | d | 0 |
1799 | e | 2 |
1800 +------+------+
1801
1802and these conditions now hold; changes in caps:
1803
92993692 1804 $hash{'a'} is false
1805 $hash{'d'} is false
1806 defined $hash{'d'} is true
1807 defined $hash{'a'} is false
1808 exists $hash{'a'} is FALSE (Perl5 only)
1809 grep ($_ eq 'a', keys %hash) is FALSE
68dc0745 1810
1811See, the whole entry is gone!
1812
1813=head2 Why don't my tied hashes make the defined/exists distinction?
1814
92993692 1815This depends on the tied hash's implementation of EXISTS().
1816For example, there isn't the concept of undef with hashes
1817that are tied to DBM* files. It also means that exists() and
1818defined() do the same thing with a DBM* file, and what they
1819end up doing is not what they do with ordinary hashes.
68dc0745 1820
1821=head2 How do I reset an each() operation part-way through?
1822
5a964f20 1823Using C<keys %hash> in scalar context returns the number of keys in
68dc0745 1824the hash I<and> resets the iterator associated with the hash. You may
1825need to do this if you use C<last> to exit a loop early so that when you
46fc3d4c 1826re-enter it, the hash iterator has been reset.
68dc0745 1827
1828=head2 How can I get the unique keys from two hashes?
1829
d92eb7b0 1830First you extract the keys from the hashes into lists, then solve
1831the "removing duplicates" problem described above. For example:
68dc0745 1832
1833 %seen = ();
1834 for $element (keys(%foo), keys(%bar)) {
1835 $seen{$element}++;
1836 }
1837 @uniq = keys %seen;
1838
1839Or more succinctly:
1840
1841 @uniq = keys %{{%foo,%bar}};
1842
1843Or if you really want to save space:
1844
1845 %seen = ();
1846 while (defined ($key = each %foo)) {
1847 $seen{$key}++;
1848 }
1849 while (defined ($key = each %bar)) {
1850 $seen{$key}++;
1851 }
1852 @uniq = keys %seen;
1853
1854=head2 How can I store a multidimensional array in a DBM file?
1855
1856Either stringify the structure yourself (no fun), or else
1857get the MLDBM (which uses Data::Dumper) module from CPAN and layer
1858it on top of either DB_File or GDBM_File.
1859
1860=head2 How can I make my hash remember the order I put elements into it?
1861
1862Use the Tie::IxHash from CPAN.
1863
46fc3d4c 1864 use Tie::IxHash;
49d635f9 1865 tie my %myhash, Tie::IxHash;
1866 for (my $i=0; $i<20; $i++) {
46fc3d4c 1867 $myhash{$i} = 2*$i;
1868 }
49d635f9 1869 my @keys = keys %myhash;
46fc3d4c 1870 # @keys = (0,1,2,3,...)
1871
68dc0745 1872=head2 Why does passing a subroutine an undefined element in a hash create it?
1873
1874If you say something like:
1875
1876 somefunc($hash{"nonesuch key here"});
1877
1878Then that element "autovivifies"; that is, it springs into existence
1879whether you store something there or not. That's because functions
1880get scalars passed in by reference. If somefunc() modifies C<$_[0]>,
1881it has to be ready to write it back into the caller's version.
1882
87275199 1883This has been fixed as of Perl5.004.
68dc0745 1884
1885Normally, merely accessing a key's value for a nonexistent key does
1886I<not> cause that key to be forever there. This is different than
1887awk's behavior.
1888
fc36a67e 1889=head2 How can I make the Perl equivalent of a C structure/C++ class/hash or array of hashes or arrays?
68dc0745 1890
65acb1b1 1891Usually a hash ref, perhaps like this:
1892
1893 $record = {
1894 NAME => "Jason",
1895 EMPNO => 132,
1896 TITLE => "deputy peon",
1897 AGE => 23,
1898 SALARY => 37_000,
1899 PALS => [ "Norbert", "Rhys", "Phineas"],
1900 };
1901
1902References are documented in L<perlref> and the upcoming L<perlreftut>.
1903Examples of complex data structures are given in L<perldsc> and
1904L<perllol>. Examples of structures and object-oriented classes are
1905in L<perltoot>.
68dc0745 1906
1907=head2 How can I use a reference as a hash key?
1908
fe854a6f 1909You can't do this directly, but you could use the standard Tie::RefHash
87275199 1910module distributed with Perl.
68dc0745 1911
1912=head1 Data: Misc
1913
1914=head2 How do I handle binary data correctly?
1915
1916Perl is binary clean, so this shouldn't be a problem. For example,
1917this works fine (assuming the files are found):
1918
1919 if (`cat /vmunix` =~ /gzip/) {
1920 print "Your kernel is GNU-zip enabled!\n";
1921 }
1922
d92eb7b0 1923On less elegant (read: Byzantine) systems, however, you have
1924to play tedious games with "text" versus "binary" files. See
49d635f9 1925L<perlfunc/"binmode"> or L<perlopentut>.
68dc0745 1926
1927If you're concerned about 8-bit ASCII data, then see L<perllocale>.
1928
54310121 1929If you want to deal with multibyte characters, however, there are
68dc0745 1930some gotchas. See the section on Regular Expressions.
1931
1932=head2 How do I determine whether a scalar is a number/whole/integer/float?
1933
1934Assuming that you don't care about IEEE notations like "NaN" or
1935"Infinity", you probably just want to use a regular expression.
1936
65acb1b1 1937 if (/\D/) { print "has nondigits\n" }
1938 if (/^\d+$/) { print "is a whole number\n" }
1939 if (/^-?\d+$/) { print "is an integer\n" }
1940 if (/^[+-]?\d+$/) { print "is a +/- integer\n" }
1941 if (/^-?\d+\.?\d*$/) { print "is a real number\n" }
881bdbd4 1942 if (/^-?(?:\d+(?:\.\d*)?|\.\d+)$/) { print "is a decimal number\n" }
65acb1b1 1943 if (/^([+-]?)(?=\d|\.\d)\d*(\.\d*)?([Ee]([+-]?\d+))?$/)
881bdbd4 1944 { print "a C float\n" }
68dc0745 1945
92993692 1946You can also use the L<Data::Types|Data::Types> module on
1947the CPAN, which exports functions that validate data types
f0f835c2 1948using these and other regular expressions, or you can use
1949the C<Regexp::Common> module from CPAN which has regular
1950expressions to match various types of numbers.
b5b6f210 1951
5a964f20 1952If you're on a POSIX system, Perl's supports the C<POSIX::strtod>
1953function. Its semantics are somewhat cumbersome, so here's a C<getnum>
1954wrapper function for more convenient access. This function takes
1955a string and returns the number it found, or C<undef> for input that
1956isn't a C float. The C<is_numeric> function is a front end to C<getnum>
1957if you just want to say, ``Is this a float?''
1958
1959 sub getnum {
1960 use POSIX qw(strtod);
1961 my $str = shift;
1962 $str =~ s/^\s+//;
1963 $str =~ s/\s+$//;
1964 $! = 0;
1965 my($num, $unparsed) = strtod($str);
1966 if (($str eq '') || ($unparsed != 0) || $!) {
1967 return undef;
1968 } else {
1969 return $num;
1970 }
1971 }
1972
072dc14b 1973 sub is_numeric { defined getnum($_[0]) }
5a964f20 1974
b5b6f210 1975Or you could check out the L<String::Scanf|String::Scanf> module on the CPAN
1976instead. The POSIX module (part of the standard Perl distribution) provides
1977the C<strtod> and C<strtol> for converting strings to double and longs,
6cecdcac 1978respectively.
68dc0745 1979
1980=head2 How do I keep persistent data across program calls?
1981
1982For some specific applications, you can use one of the DBM modules.
fe854a6f 1983See L<AnyDBM_File>. More generically, you should consult the FreezeThaw
1984or Storable modules from CPAN. Starting from Perl 5.8 Storable is part
1985of the standard distribution. Here's one example using Storable's C<store>
1986and C<retrieve> functions:
65acb1b1 1987
1988 use Storable;
1989 store(\%hash, "filename");
1990
1991 # later on...
1992 $href = retrieve("filename"); # by ref
1993 %hash = %{ retrieve("filename") }; # direct to hash
68dc0745 1994
1995=head2 How do I print out or copy a recursive data structure?
1996
65acb1b1 1997The Data::Dumper module on CPAN (or the 5.005 release of Perl) is great
1998for printing out data structures. The Storable module, found on CPAN,
1999provides a function called C<dclone> that recursively copies its argument.
2000
2001 use Storable qw(dclone);
2002 $r2 = dclone($r1);
68dc0745 2003
65acb1b1 2004Where $r1 can be a reference to any kind of data structure you'd like.
2005It will be deeply copied. Because C<dclone> takes and returns references,
2006you'd have to add extra punctuation if you had a hash of arrays that
2007you wanted to copy.
68dc0745 2008
65acb1b1 2009 %newhash = %{ dclone(\%oldhash) };
68dc0745 2010
2011=head2 How do I define methods for every class/object?
2012
2013Use the UNIVERSAL class (see L<UNIVERSAL>).
2014
2015=head2 How do I verify a credit card checksum?
2016
2017Get the Business::CreditCard module from CPAN.
2018
65acb1b1 2019=head2 How do I pack arrays of doubles or floats for XS code?
2020
2021The kgbpack.c code in the PGPLOT module on CPAN does just this.
2022If you're doing a lot of float or double processing, consider using
2023the PDL module from CPAN instead--it makes number-crunching easy.
2024
68dc0745 2025=head1 AUTHOR AND COPYRIGHT
2026
0bc0ad85 2027Copyright (c) 1997-2002 Tom Christiansen and Nathan Torkington.
5a964f20 2028All rights reserved.
2029
5a7beb56 2030This documentation is free; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
2031under the same terms as Perl itself.
5a964f20 2032
2033Irrespective of its distribution, all code examples in this file
2034are hereby placed into the public domain. You are permitted and
2035encouraged to use this code in your own programs for fun
2036or for profit as you see fit. A simple comment in the code giving
2037credit would be courteous but is not required.