perlfaq4 tweak (from Damian Conway <damian@cs.monash.edu.au>)
[p5sagit/p5-mst-13.2.git] / pod / perlfaq4.pod
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68dc0745 1=head1 NAME
2
d92eb7b0 3perlfaq4 - Data Manipulation ($Revision: 1.49 $, $Date: 1999/05/23 20:37:49 $)
68dc0745 4
5=head1 DESCRIPTION
6
7The section of the FAQ answers question related to the manipulation
8of data as numbers, dates, strings, arrays, hashes, and miscellaneous
9data issues.
10
11=head1 Data: Numbers
12
46fc3d4c 13=head2 Why am I getting long decimals (eg, 19.9499999999999) instead of the numbers I should be getting (eg, 19.95)?
14
5a964f20 15The infinite set that a mathematician thinks of as the real numbers can
16only be approximate on a computer, since the computer only has a finite
17number of bits to store an infinite number of, um, numbers.
18
46fc3d4c 19Internally, your computer represents floating-point numbers in binary.
92c2ed05 20Floating-point numbers read in from a file or appearing as literals
21in your program are converted from their decimal floating-point
46fc3d4c 22representation (eg, 19.95) to the internal binary representation.
23
24However, 19.95 can't be precisely represented as a binary
25floating-point number, just like 1/3 can't be exactly represented as a
26decimal floating-point number. The computer's binary representation
27of 19.95, therefore, isn't exactly 19.95.
28
29When a floating-point number gets printed, the binary floating-point
30representation is converted back to decimal. These decimal numbers
31are displayed in either the format you specify with printf(), or the
32current output format for numbers (see L<perlvar/"$#"> if you use
33print. C<$#> has a different default value in Perl5 than it did in
87275199 34Perl4. Changing C<$#> yourself is deprecated.)
46fc3d4c 35
36This affects B<all> computer languages that represent decimal
37floating-point numbers in binary, not just Perl. Perl provides
38arbitrary-precision decimal numbers with the Math::BigFloat module
39(part of the standard Perl distribution), but mathematical operations
40are consequently slower.
41
42To get rid of the superfluous digits, just use a format (eg,
43C<printf("%.2f", 19.95)>) to get the required precision.
65acb1b1 44See L<perlop/"Floating-point Arithmetic">.
46fc3d4c 45
68dc0745 46=head2 Why isn't my octal data interpreted correctly?
47
48Perl only understands octal and hex numbers as such when they occur
49as literals in your program. If they are read in from somewhere and
50assigned, no automatic conversion takes place. You must explicitly
51use oct() or hex() if you want the values converted. oct() interprets
52both hex ("0x350") numbers and octal ones ("0350" or even without the
53leading "0", like "377"), while hex() only converts hexadecimal ones,
54with or without a leading "0x", like "0x255", "3A", "ff", or "deadbeef".
55
56This problem shows up most often when people try using chmod(), mkdir(),
57umask(), or sysopen(), which all want permissions in octal.
58
59 chmod(644, $file); # WRONG -- perl -w catches this
60 chmod(0644, $file); # right
61
65acb1b1 62=head2 Does Perl have a round() function? What about ceil() and floor()? Trig functions?
68dc0745 63
92c2ed05 64Remember that int() merely truncates toward 0. For rounding to a
65certain number of digits, sprintf() or printf() is usually the easiest
66route.
67
68 printf("%.3f", 3.1415926535); # prints 3.142
68dc0745 69
87275199 70The POSIX module (part of the standard Perl distribution) implements
68dc0745 71ceil(), floor(), and a number of other mathematical and trigonometric
72functions.
73
92c2ed05 74 use POSIX;
75 $ceil = ceil(3.5); # 4
76 $floor = floor(3.5); # 3
77
46fc3d4c 78In 5.000 to 5.003 Perls, trigonometry was done in the Math::Complex
87275199 79module. With 5.004, the Math::Trig module (part of the standard Perl
46fc3d4c 80distribution) implements the trigonometric functions. Internally it
81uses the Math::Complex module and some functions can break out from
82the real axis into the complex plane, for example the inverse sine of
832.
68dc0745 84
85Rounding in financial applications can have serious implications, and
86the rounding method used should be specified precisely. In these
87cases, it probably pays not to trust whichever system rounding is
88being used by Perl, but to instead implement the rounding function you
89need yourself.
90
65acb1b1 91To see why, notice how you'll still have an issue on half-way-point
92alternation:
93
94 for ($i = 0; $i < 1.01; $i += 0.05) { printf "%.1f ",$i}
95
96 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
97 0.8 0.8 0.9 0.9 1.0 1.0
98
99Don't blame Perl. It's the same as in C. IEEE says we have to do this.
100Perl numbers whose absolute values are integers under 2**31 (on 32 bit
101machines) will work pretty much like mathematical integers. Other numbers
102are not guaranteed.
103
68dc0745 104=head2 How do I convert bits into ints?
105
92c2ed05 106To turn a string of 1s and 0s like C<10110110> into a scalar containing
d92eb7b0 107its binary value, use the pack() and unpack() functions (documented in
87275199 108L<perlfunc/"pack"> and L<perlfunc/"unpack">):
68dc0745 109
d92eb7b0 110 $decimal = unpack('c', pack('B8', '10110110'));
111
112This packs the string C<10110110> into an eight bit binary structure.
87275199 113This is then unpacked as a character, which returns its ordinal value.
d92eb7b0 114
115This does the same thing:
116
117 $decimal = ord(pack('B8', '10110110'));
68dc0745 118
119Here's an example of going the other way:
120
d92eb7b0 121 $binary_string = unpack('B*', "\x29");
68dc0745 122
65acb1b1 123=head2 Why doesn't & work the way I want it to?
124
125The behavior of binary arithmetic operators depends on whether they're
126used on numbers or strings. The operators treat a string as a series
127of bits and work with that (the string C<"3"> is the bit pattern
128C<00110011>). The operators work with the binary form of a number
129(the number C<3> is treated as the bit pattern C<00000011>).
130
131So, saying C<11 & 3> performs the "and" operation on numbers (yielding
132C<1>). Saying C<"11" & "3"> performs the "and" operation on strings
133(yielding C<"1">).
134
135Most problems with C<&> and C<|> arise because the programmer thinks
136they have a number but really it's a string. The rest arise because
137the programmer says:
138
139 if ("\020\020" & "\101\101") {
140 # ...
141 }
142
143but a string consisting of two null bytes (the result of C<"\020\020"
144& "\101\101">) is not a false value in Perl. You need:
145
146 if ( ("\020\020" & "\101\101") !~ /[^\000]/) {
147 # ...
148 }
149
68dc0745 150=head2 How do I multiply matrices?
151
152Use the Math::Matrix or Math::MatrixReal modules (available from CPAN)
153or the PDL extension (also available from CPAN).
154
155=head2 How do I perform an operation on a series of integers?
156
157To call a function on each element in an array, and collect the
158results, use:
159
160 @results = map { my_func($_) } @array;
161
162For example:
163
164 @triple = map { 3 * $_ } @single;
165
166To call a function on each element of an array, but ignore the
167results:
168
169 foreach $iterator (@array) {
65acb1b1 170 some_func($iterator);
68dc0745 171 }
172
173To call a function on each integer in a (small) range, you B<can> use:
174
65acb1b1 175 @results = map { some_func($_) } (5 .. 25);
68dc0745 176
177but you should be aware that the C<..> operator creates an array of
178all integers in the range. This can take a lot of memory for large
179ranges. Instead use:
180
181 @results = ();
182 for ($i=5; $i < 500_005; $i++) {
65acb1b1 183 push(@results, some_func($i));
68dc0745 184 }
185
87275199 186This situation has been fixed in Perl5.005. Use of C<..> in a C<for>
187loop will iterate over the range, without creating the entire range.
188
189 for my $i (5 .. 500_005) {
190 push(@results, some_func($i));
191 }
192
193will not create a list of 500,000 integers.
194
68dc0745 195=head2 How can I output Roman numerals?
196
197Get the http://www.perl.com/CPAN/modules/by-module/Roman module.
198
199=head2 Why aren't my random numbers random?
200
65acb1b1 201If you're using a version of Perl before 5.004, you must call C<srand>
202once at the start of your program to seed the random number generator.
2035.004 and later automatically call C<srand> at the beginning. Don't
204call C<srand> more than once--you make your numbers less random, rather
205than more.
92c2ed05 206
65acb1b1 207Computers are good at being predictable and bad at being random
208(despite appearances caused by bugs in your programs :-).
209http://www.perl.com/CPAN/doc/FMTEYEWTK/random, courtesy of Tom
210Phoenix, talks more about this.. John von Neumann said, ``Anyone who
211attempts to generate random numbers by deterministic means is, of
212course, living in a state of sin.''
213
214If you want numbers that are more random than C<rand> with C<srand>
215provides, you should also check out the Math::TrulyRandom module from
216CPAN. It uses the imperfections in your system's timer to generate
217random numbers, but this takes quite a while. If you want a better
92c2ed05 218pseudorandom generator than comes with your operating system, look at
65acb1b1 219``Numerical Recipes in C'' at http://www.nr.com/ .
68dc0745 220
221=head1 Data: Dates
222
223=head2 How do I find the week-of-the-year/day-of-the-year?
224
225The day of the year is in the array returned by localtime() (see
226L<perlfunc/"localtime">):
227
228 $day_of_year = (localtime(time()))[7];
229
230or more legibly (in 5.004 or higher):
231
232 use Time::localtime;
233 $day_of_year = localtime(time())->yday;
234
235You can find the week of the year by dividing this by 7:
236
237 $week_of_year = int($day_of_year / 7);
238
92c2ed05 239Of course, this believes that weeks start at zero. The Date::Calc
240module from CPAN has a lot of date calculation functions, including
5e3006a4 241day of the year, week of the year, and so on. Note that not
65acb1b1 242all businesses consider ``week 1'' to be the same; for example,
243American businesses often consider the first week with a Monday
244in it to be Work Week #1, despite ISO 8601, which considers
245WW1 to be the first week with a Thursday in it.
68dc0745 246
d92eb7b0 247=head2 How do I find the current century or millennium?
248
249Use the following simple functions:
250
251 sub get_century {
252 return int((((localtime(shift || time))[5] + 1999))/100);
253 }
254 sub get_millennium {
255 return 1+int((((localtime(shift || time))[5] + 1899))/1000);
256 }
257
258On some systems, you'll find that the POSIX module's strftime() function
259has been extended in a non-standard way to use a C<%C> format, which they
260sometimes claim is the "century". It isn't, because on most such systems,
261this is only the first two digits of the four-digit year, and thus cannot
262be used to reliably determine the current century or millennium.
263
92c2ed05 264=head2 How can I compare two dates and find the difference?
68dc0745 265
92c2ed05 266If you're storing your dates as epoch seconds then simply subtract one
267from the other. If you've got a structured date (distinct year, day,
d92eb7b0 268month, hour, minute, seconds values), then for reasons of accessibility,
269simplicity, and efficiency, merely use either timelocal or timegm (from
270the Time::Local module in the standard distribution) to reduce structured
271dates to epoch seconds. However, if you don't know the precise format of
272your dates, then you should probably use either of the Date::Manip and
273Date::Calc modules from CPAN before you go hacking up your own parsing
274routine to handle arbitrary date formats.
68dc0745 275
276=head2 How can I take a string and turn it into epoch seconds?
277
278If it's a regular enough string that it always has the same format,
92c2ed05 279you can split it up and pass the parts to C<timelocal> in the standard
280Time::Local module. Otherwise, you should look into the Date::Calc
281and Date::Manip modules from CPAN.
68dc0745 282
283=head2 How can I find the Julian Day?
284
6cecdcac 285Use the Time::JulianDay module (part of the Time-modules bundle
286available from CPAN.)
d92eb7b0 287
288Before you immerse yourself too deeply in this, be sure to verify that it
289is the I<Julian> Day you really want. Are they really just interested in
290a way of getting serial days so that they can do date arithmetic? If you
291are interested in performing date arithmetic, this can be done using
292either Date::Manip or Date::Calc, without converting to Julian Day first.
293
294There is too much confusion on this issue to cover in this FAQ, but the
295term is applied (correctly) to a calendar now supplanted by the Gregorian
296Calendar, with the Julian Calendar failing to adjust properly for leap
297years on centennial years (among other annoyances). The term is also used
298(incorrectly) to mean: [1] days in the Gregorian Calendar; and [2] days
299since a particular starting time or `epoch', usually 1970 in the Unix
300world and 1980 in the MS-DOS/Windows world. If you find that it is not
301the first meaning that you really want, then check out the Date::Manip
302and Date::Calc modules. (Thanks to David Cassell for most of this text.)
be94a901 303
65acb1b1 304=head2 How do I find yesterday's date?
305
306The C<time()> function returns the current time in seconds since the
d92eb7b0 307epoch. Take twenty-four hours off that:
65acb1b1 308
309 $yesterday = time() - ( 24 * 60 * 60 );
310
311Then you can pass this to C<localtime()> and get the individual year,
312month, day, hour, minute, seconds values.
313
d92eb7b0 314Note very carefully that the code above assumes that your days are
315twenty-four hours each. For most people, there are two days a year
316when they aren't: the switch to and from summer time throws this off.
317A solution to this issue is offered by Russ Allbery.
318
319 sub yesterday {
320 my $now = defined $_[0] ? $_[0] : time;
321 my $then = $now - 60 * 60 * 24;
322 my $ndst = (localtime $now)[8] > 0;
323 my $tdst = (localtime $then)[8] > 0;
324 $then - ($tdst - $ndst) * 60 * 60;
325 }
326 # Should give you "this time yesterday" in seconds since epoch relative to
327 # the first argument or the current time if no argument is given and
328 # suitable for passing to localtime or whatever else you need to do with
329 # it. $ndst is whether we're currently in daylight savings time; $tdst is
330 # whether the point 24 hours ago was in daylight savings time. If $tdst
331 # and $ndst are the same, a boundary wasn't crossed, and the correction
332 # will subtract 0. If $tdst is 1 and $ndst is 0, subtract an hour more
333 # from yesterday's time since we gained an extra hour while going off
334 # daylight savings time. If $tdst is 0 and $ndst is 1, subtract a
335 # negative hour (add an hour) to yesterday's time since we lost an hour.
336 #
337 # All of this is because during those days when one switches off or onto
338 # DST, a "day" isn't 24 hours long; it's either 23 or 25.
339 #
340 # The explicit settings of $ndst and $tdst are necessary because localtime
341 # only says it returns the system tm struct, and the system tm struct at
87275199 342 # least on Solaris doesn't guarantee any particular positive value (like,
d92eb7b0 343 # say, 1) for isdst, just a positive value. And that value can
344 # potentially be negative, if DST information isn't available (this sub
345 # just treats those cases like no DST).
346 #
347 # Note that between 2am and 3am on the day after the time zone switches
348 # off daylight savings time, the exact hour of "yesterday" corresponding
349 # to the current hour is not clearly defined. Note also that if used
350 # between 2am and 3am the day after the change to daylight savings time,
351 # the result will be between 3am and 4am of the previous day; it's
352 # arguable whether this is correct.
353 #
354 # This sub does not attempt to deal with leap seconds (most things don't).
355 #
356 # Copyright relinquished 1999 by Russ Allbery <rra@stanford.edu>
357 # This code is in the public domain
358
87275199 359=head2 Does Perl have a Year 2000 problem? Is Perl Y2K compliant?
68dc0745 360
65acb1b1 361Short answer: No, Perl does not have a Year 2000 problem. Yes, Perl is
362Y2K compliant (whatever that means). The programmers you've hired to
363use it, however, probably are not.
364
365Long answer: The question belies a true understanding of the issue.
366Perl is just as Y2K compliant as your pencil--no more, and no less.
367Can you use your pencil to write a non-Y2K-compliant memo? Of course
368you can. Is that the pencil's fault? Of course it isn't.
92c2ed05 369
87275199 370The date and time functions supplied with Perl (gmtime and localtime)
65acb1b1 371supply adequate information to determine the year well beyond 2000
372(2038 is when trouble strikes for 32-bit machines). The year returned
373by these functions when used in an array context is the year minus 1900.
374For years between 1910 and 1999 this I<happens> to be a 2-digit decimal
375number. To avoid the year 2000 problem simply do not treat the year as
376a 2-digit number. It isn't.
68dc0745 377
5a964f20 378When gmtime() and localtime() are used in scalar context they return
68dc0745 379a timestamp string that contains a fully-expanded year. For example,
380C<$timestamp = gmtime(1005613200)> sets $timestamp to "Tue Nov 13 01:00:00
3812001". There's no year 2000 problem here.
382
5a964f20 383That doesn't mean that Perl can't be used to create non-Y2K compliant
384programs. It can. But so can your pencil. It's the fault of the user,
385not the language. At the risk of inflaming the NRA: ``Perl doesn't
386break Y2K, people do.'' See http://language.perl.com/news/y2k.html for
387a longer exposition.
388
68dc0745 389=head1 Data: Strings
390
391=head2 How do I validate input?
392
393The answer to this question is usually a regular expression, perhaps
5a964f20 394with auxiliary logic. See the more specific questions (numbers, mail
68dc0745 395addresses, etc.) for details.
396
397=head2 How do I unescape a string?
398
92c2ed05 399It depends just what you mean by ``escape''. URL escapes are dealt
400with in L<perlfaq9>. Shell escapes with the backslash (C<\>)
68dc0745 401character are removed with:
402
403 s/\\(.)/$1/g;
404
92c2ed05 405This won't expand C<"\n"> or C<"\t"> or any other special escapes.
68dc0745 406
407=head2 How do I remove consecutive pairs of characters?
408
92c2ed05 409To turn C<"abbcccd"> into C<"abccd">:
68dc0745 410
d92eb7b0 411 s/(.)\1/$1/g; # add /s to include newlines
412
413Here's a solution that turns "abbcccd" to "abcd":
414
415 y///cs; # y == tr, but shorter :-)
68dc0745 416
417=head2 How do I expand function calls in a string?
418
419This is documented in L<perlref>. In general, this is fraught with
420quoting and readability problems, but it is possible. To interpolate
5a964f20 421a subroutine call (in list context) into a string:
68dc0745 422
423 print "My sub returned @{[mysub(1,2,3)]} that time.\n";
424
425If you prefer scalar context, similar chicanery is also useful for
426arbitrary expressions:
427
428 print "That yields ${\($n + 5)} widgets\n";
429
92c2ed05 430Version 5.004 of Perl had a bug that gave list context to the
431expression in C<${...}>, but this is fixed in version 5.005.
432
433See also ``How can I expand variables in text strings?'' in this
434section of the FAQ.
46fc3d4c 435
68dc0745 436=head2 How do I find matching/nesting anything?
437
92c2ed05 438This isn't something that can be done in one regular expression, no
439matter how complicated. To find something between two single
440characters, a pattern like C</x([^x]*)x/> will get the intervening
441bits in $1. For multiple ones, then something more like
442C</alpha(.*?)omega/> would be needed. But none of these deals with
443nested patterns, nor can they. For that you'll have to write a
444parser.
445
446If you are serious about writing a parser, there are a number of
6a2af475 447modules or oddities that will make your life a lot easier. There are
448the CPAN modules Parse::RecDescent, Parse::Yapp, and Text::Balanced;
449the byacc program; and Mark-Jason
87275199 450Dominus's excellent I<py> tool at http://www.plover.com/%7Emjd/perl/py/
65acb1b1 451.
68dc0745 452
92c2ed05 453One simple destructive, inside-out approach that you might try is to
454pull out the smallest nesting parts one at a time:
5a964f20 455
d92eb7b0 456 while (s/BEGIN((?:(?!BEGIN)(?!END).)*)END//gs) {
5a964f20 457 # do something with $1
458 }
459
65acb1b1 460A more complicated and sneaky approach is to make Perl's regular
461expression engine do it for you. This is courtesy Dean Inada, and
462rather has the nature of an Obfuscated Perl Contest entry, but it
463really does work:
464
465 # $_ contains the string to parse
466 # BEGIN and END are the opening and closing markers for the
467 # nested text.
c47ff5f1 468
65acb1b1 469 @( = ('(','');
470 @) = (')','');
471 ($re=$_)=~s/((BEGIN)|(END)|.)/$)[!$3]\Q$1\E$([!$2]/gs;
472 @$ = (eval{/$re/},$@!~/unmatched/);
473 print join("\n",@$[0..$#$]) if( $$[-1] );
474
68dc0745 475=head2 How do I reverse a string?
476
5a964f20 477Use reverse() in scalar context, as documented in
68dc0745 478L<perlfunc/reverse>.
479
480 $reversed = reverse $string;
481
482=head2 How do I expand tabs in a string?
483
5a964f20 484You can do it yourself:
68dc0745 485
486 1 while $string =~ s/\t+/' ' x (length($&) * 8 - length($`) % 8)/e;
487
87275199 488Or you can just use the Text::Tabs module (part of the standard Perl
68dc0745 489distribution).
490
491 use Text::Tabs;
492 @expanded_lines = expand(@lines_with_tabs);
493
494=head2 How do I reformat a paragraph?
495
87275199 496Use Text::Wrap (part of the standard Perl distribution):
68dc0745 497
498 use Text::Wrap;
499 print wrap("\t", ' ', @paragraphs);
500
92c2ed05 501The paragraphs you give to Text::Wrap should not contain embedded
46fc3d4c 502newlines. Text::Wrap doesn't justify the lines (flush-right).
503
68dc0745 504=head2 How can I access/change the first N letters of a string?
505
506There are many ways. If you just want to grab a copy, use
92c2ed05 507substr():
68dc0745 508
509 $first_byte = substr($a, 0, 1);
510
511If you want to modify part of a string, the simplest way is often to
512use substr() as an lvalue:
513
514 substr($a, 0, 3) = "Tom";
515
92c2ed05 516Although those with a pattern matching kind of thought process will
517likely prefer:
68dc0745 518
519 $a =~ s/^.../Tom/;
520
521=head2 How do I change the Nth occurrence of something?
522
92c2ed05 523You have to keep track of N yourself. For example, let's say you want
524to change the fifth occurrence of C<"whoever"> or C<"whomever"> into
d92eb7b0 525C<"whosoever"> or C<"whomsoever">, case insensitively. These
526all assume that $_ contains the string to be altered.
68dc0745 527
528 $count = 0;
529 s{((whom?)ever)}{
530 ++$count == 5 # is it the 5th?
531 ? "${2}soever" # yes, swap
532 : $1 # renege and leave it there
d92eb7b0 533 }ige;
68dc0745 534
5a964f20 535In the more general case, you can use the C</g> modifier in a C<while>
536loop, keeping count of matches.
537
538 $WANT = 3;
539 $count = 0;
d92eb7b0 540 $_ = "One fish two fish red fish blue fish";
5a964f20 541 while (/(\w+)\s+fish\b/gi) {
542 if (++$count == $WANT) {
543 print "The third fish is a $1 one.\n";
5a964f20 544 }
545 }
546
92c2ed05 547That prints out: C<"The third fish is a red one."> You can also use a
5a964f20 548repetition count and repeated pattern like this:
549
550 /(?:\w+\s+fish\s+){2}(\w+)\s+fish/i;
551
68dc0745 552=head2 How can I count the number of occurrences of a substring within a string?
553
554There are a number of ways, with varying efficiency: If you want a
555count of a certain single character (X) within a string, you can use the
556C<tr///> function like so:
557
368c9434 558 $string = "ThisXlineXhasXsomeXx'sXinXit";
68dc0745 559 $count = ($string =~ tr/X//);
d92eb7b0 560 print "There are $count X characters in the string";
68dc0745 561
562This is fine if you are just looking for a single character. However,
563if you are trying to count multiple character substrings within a
564larger string, C<tr///> won't work. What you can do is wrap a while()
565loop around a global pattern match. For example, let's count negative
566integers:
567
568 $string = "-9 55 48 -2 23 -76 4 14 -44";
569 while ($string =~ /-\d+/g) { $count++ }
570 print "There are $count negative numbers in the string";
571
572=head2 How do I capitalize all the words on one line?
573
574To make the first letter of each word upper case:
3fe9a6f1 575
68dc0745 576 $line =~ s/\b(\w)/\U$1/g;
577
46fc3d4c 578This has the strange effect of turning "C<don't do it>" into "C<Don'T
87275199 579Do It>". Sometimes you might want this, instead (Suggested by brian d.
580foy):
46fc3d4c 581
582 $string =~ s/ (
583 (^\w) #at the beginning of the line
584 | # or
585 (\s\w) #preceded by whitespace
586 )
587 /\U$1/xg;
588 $string =~ /([\w']+)/\u\L$1/g;
589
68dc0745 590To make the whole line upper case:
3fe9a6f1 591
68dc0745 592 $line = uc($line);
593
594To force each word to be lower case, with the first letter upper case:
3fe9a6f1 595
68dc0745 596 $line =~ s/(\w+)/\u\L$1/g;
597
5a964f20 598You can (and probably should) enable locale awareness of those
599characters by placing a C<use locale> pragma in your program.
92c2ed05 600See L<perllocale> for endless details on locales.
5a964f20 601
65acb1b1 602This is sometimes referred to as putting something into "title
d92eb7b0 603case", but that's not quite accurate. Consider the proper
65acb1b1 604capitalization of the movie I<Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to
605Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb>, for example.
606
68dc0745 607=head2 How can I split a [character] delimited string except when inside
608[character]? (Comma-separated files)
609
610Take the example case of trying to split a string that is comma-separated
611into its different fields. (We'll pretend you said comma-separated, not
612comma-delimited, which is different and almost never what you mean.) You
613can't use C<split(/,/)> because you shouldn't split if the comma is inside
614quotes. For example, take a data line like this:
615
616 SAR001,"","Cimetrix, Inc","Bob Smith","CAM",N,8,1,0,7,"Error, Core Dumped"
617
618Due to the restriction of the quotes, this is a fairly complex
619problem. Thankfully, we have Jeffrey Friedl, author of a highly
620recommended book on regular expressions, to handle these for us. He
621suggests (assuming your string is contained in $text):
622
623 @new = ();
624 push(@new, $+) while $text =~ m{
625 "([^\"\\]*(?:\\.[^\"\\]*)*)",? # groups the phrase inside the quotes
626 | ([^,]+),?
627 | ,
628 }gx;
629 push(@new, undef) if substr($text,-1,1) eq ',';
630
46fc3d4c 631If you want to represent quotation marks inside a
632quotation-mark-delimited field, escape them with backslashes (eg,
2ceaccd7 633C<"like \"this\"">. Unescaping them is a task addressed earlier in
46fc3d4c 634this section.
635
87275199 636Alternatively, the Text::ParseWords module (part of the standard Perl
68dc0745 637distribution) lets you say:
638
639 use Text::ParseWords;
640 @new = quotewords(",", 0, $text);
641
65acb1b1 642There's also a Text::CSV module on CPAN.
643
68dc0745 644=head2 How do I strip blank space from the beginning/end of a string?
645
5a964f20 646Although the simplest approach would seem to be:
68dc0745 647
648 $string =~ s/^\s*(.*?)\s*$/$1/;
649
d92eb7b0 650Not only is this unnecessarily slow and destructive, it also fails with
651embedded newlines. It is much faster to do this operation in two steps:
68dc0745 652
653 $string =~ s/^\s+//;
654 $string =~ s/\s+$//;
655
656Or more nicely written as:
657
658 for ($string) {
659 s/^\s+//;
660 s/\s+$//;
661 }
662
5e3006a4 663This idiom takes advantage of the C<foreach> loop's aliasing
5a964f20 664behavior to factor out common code. You can do this
665on several strings at once, or arrays, or even the
d92eb7b0 666values of a hash if you use a slice:
5a964f20 667
668 # trim whitespace in the scalar, the array,
669 # and all the values in the hash
670 foreach ($scalar, @array, @hash{keys %hash}) {
671 s/^\s+//;
672 s/\s+$//;
673 }
674
65acb1b1 675=head2 How do I pad a string with blanks or pad a number with zeroes?
676
d92eb7b0 677(This answer contributed by Uri Guttman, with kibitzing from
678Bart Lateur.)
65acb1b1 679
680In the following examples, C<$pad_len> is the length to which you wish
d92eb7b0 681to pad the string, C<$text> or C<$num> contains the string to be padded,
682and C<$pad_char> contains the padding character. You can use a single
683character string constant instead of the C<$pad_char> variable if you
684know what it is in advance. And in the same way you can use an integer in
685place of C<$pad_len> if you know the pad length in advance.
65acb1b1 686
d92eb7b0 687The simplest method uses the C<sprintf> function. It can pad on the left
688or right with blanks and on the left with zeroes and it will not
689truncate the result. The C<pack> function can only pad strings on the
690right with blanks and it will truncate the result to a maximum length of
691C<$pad_len>.
65acb1b1 692
d92eb7b0 693 # Left padding a string with blanks (no truncation):
694 $padded = sprintf("%${pad_len}s", $text);
65acb1b1 695
d92eb7b0 696 # Right padding a string with blanks (no truncation):
697 $padded = sprintf("%-${pad_len}s", $text);
65acb1b1 698
d92eb7b0 699 # Left padding a number with 0 (no truncation):
700 $padded = sprintf("%0${pad_len}d", $num);
65acb1b1 701
d92eb7b0 702 # Right padding a string with blanks using pack (will truncate):
703 $padded = pack("A$pad_len",$text);
65acb1b1 704
d92eb7b0 705If you need to pad with a character other than blank or zero you can use
706one of the following methods. They all generate a pad string with the
707C<x> operator and combine that with C<$text>. These methods do
708not truncate C<$text>.
65acb1b1 709
d92eb7b0 710Left and right padding with any character, creating a new string:
65acb1b1 711
d92eb7b0 712 $padded = $pad_char x ( $pad_len - length( $text ) ) . $text;
713 $padded = $text . $pad_char x ( $pad_len - length( $text ) );
65acb1b1 714
d92eb7b0 715Left and right padding with any character, modifying C<$text> directly:
65acb1b1 716
d92eb7b0 717 substr( $text, 0, 0 ) = $pad_char x ( $pad_len - length( $text ) );
718 $text .= $pad_char x ( $pad_len - length( $text ) );
65acb1b1 719
68dc0745 720=head2 How do I extract selected columns from a string?
721
722Use substr() or unpack(), both documented in L<perlfunc>.
5a964f20 723If you prefer thinking in terms of columns instead of widths,
724you can use this kind of thing:
725
726 # determine the unpack format needed to split Linux ps output
727 # arguments are cut columns
728 my $fmt = cut2fmt(8, 14, 20, 26, 30, 34, 41, 47, 59, 63, 67, 72);
729
730 sub cut2fmt {
731 my(@positions) = @_;
732 my $template = '';
733 my $lastpos = 1;
734 for my $place (@positions) {
735 $template .= "A" . ($place - $lastpos) . " ";
736 $lastpos = $place;
737 }
738 $template .= "A*";
739 return $template;
740 }
68dc0745 741
742=head2 How do I find the soundex value of a string?
743
87275199 744Use the standard Text::Soundex module distributed with Perl.
d92eb7b0 745But before you do so, you may want to determine whether `soundex' is in
746fact what you think it is. Knuth's soundex algorithm compresses words
747into a small space, and so it does not necessarily distinguish between
748two words which you might want to appear separately. For example, the
749last names `Knuth' and `Kant' are both mapped to the soundex code K530.
750If Text::Soundex does not do what you are looking for, you might want
751to consider the String::Approx module available at CPAN.
68dc0745 752
753=head2 How can I expand variables in text strings?
754
755Let's assume that you have a string like:
756
757 $text = 'this has a $foo in it and a $bar';
5a964f20 758
759If those were both global variables, then this would
760suffice:
761
65acb1b1 762 $text =~ s/\$(\w+)/${$1}/g; # no /e needed
68dc0745 763
5a964f20 764But since they are probably lexicals, or at least, they could
765be, you'd have to do this:
68dc0745 766
767 $text =~ s/(\$\w+)/$1/eeg;
65acb1b1 768 die if $@; # needed /ee, not /e
68dc0745 769
5a964f20 770It's probably better in the general case to treat those
771variables as entries in some special hash. For example:
772
773 %user_defs = (
774 foo => 23,
775 bar => 19,
776 );
777 $text =~ s/\$(\w+)/$user_defs{$1}/g;
68dc0745 778
92c2ed05 779See also ``How do I expand function calls in a string?'' in this section
46fc3d4c 780of the FAQ.
781
68dc0745 782=head2 What's wrong with always quoting "$vars"?
783
784The problem is that those double-quotes force stringification,
785coercing numbers and references into strings, even when you
65acb1b1 786don't want them to be. Think of it this way: double-quote
787expansion is used to produce new strings. If you already
788have a string, why do you need more?
68dc0745 789
790If you get used to writing odd things like these:
791
792 print "$var"; # BAD
793 $new = "$old"; # BAD
794 somefunc("$var"); # BAD
795
796You'll be in trouble. Those should (in 99.8% of the cases) be
797the simpler and more direct:
798
799 print $var;
800 $new = $old;
801 somefunc($var);
802
803Otherwise, besides slowing you down, you're going to break code when
804the thing in the scalar is actually neither a string nor a number, but
805a reference:
806
807 func(\@array);
808 sub func {
809 my $aref = shift;
810 my $oref = "$aref"; # WRONG
811 }
812
813You can also get into subtle problems on those few operations in Perl
814that actually do care about the difference between a string and a
815number, such as the magical C<++> autoincrement operator or the
816syscall() function.
817
5a964f20 818Stringification also destroys arrays.
819
820 @lines = `command`;
821 print "@lines"; # WRONG - extra blanks
822 print @lines; # right
823
c47ff5f1 824=head2 Why don't my <<HERE documents work?
68dc0745 825
826Check for these three things:
827
828=over 4
829
830=item 1. There must be no space after the << part.
831
832=item 2. There (probably) should be a semicolon at the end.
833
834=item 3. You can't (easily) have any space in front of the tag.
835
836=back
837
5a964f20 838If you want to indent the text in the here document, you
839can do this:
840
841 # all in one
842 ($VAR = <<HERE_TARGET) =~ s/^\s+//gm;
843 your text
844 goes here
845 HERE_TARGET
846
847But the HERE_TARGET must still be flush against the margin.
848If you want that indented also, you'll have to quote
849in the indentation.
850
851 ($quote = <<' FINIS') =~ s/^\s+//gm;
852 ...we will have peace, when you and all your works have
853 perished--and the works of your dark master to whom you
854 would deliver us. You are a liar, Saruman, and a corrupter
855 of men's hearts. --Theoden in /usr/src/perl/taint.c
856 FINIS
857 $quote =~ s/\s*--/\n--/;
858
859A nice general-purpose fixer-upper function for indented here documents
860follows. It expects to be called with a here document as its argument.
861It looks to see whether each line begins with a common substring, and
862if so, strips that off. Otherwise, it takes the amount of leading
863white space found on the first line and removes that much off each
864subsequent line.
865
866 sub fix {
867 local $_ = shift;
868 my ($white, $leader); # common white space and common leading string
869 if (/^\s*(?:([^\w\s]+)(\s*).*\n)(?:\s*\1\2?.*\n)+$/) {
870 ($white, $leader) = ($2, quotemeta($1));
871 } else {
872 ($white, $leader) = (/^(\s+)/, '');
873 }
874 s/^\s*?$leader(?:$white)?//gm;
875 return $_;
876 }
877
c8db1d39 878This works with leading special strings, dynamically determined:
5a964f20 879
880 $remember_the_main = fix<<' MAIN_INTERPRETER_LOOP';
881 @@@ int
882 @@@ runops() {
883 @@@ SAVEI32(runlevel);
884 @@@ runlevel++;
d92eb7b0 885 @@@ while ( op = (*op->op_ppaddr)() );
5a964f20 886 @@@ TAINT_NOT;
887 @@@ return 0;
888 @@@ }
889 MAIN_INTERPRETER_LOOP
890
891Or with a fixed amount of leading white space, with remaining
892indentation correctly preserved:
893
894 $poem = fix<<EVER_ON_AND_ON;
895 Now far ahead the Road has gone,
896 And I must follow, if I can,
897 Pursuing it with eager feet,
898 Until it joins some larger way
899 Where many paths and errands meet.
900 And whither then? I cannot say.
901 --Bilbo in /usr/src/perl/pp_ctl.c
902 EVER_ON_AND_ON
903
68dc0745 904=head1 Data: Arrays
905
65acb1b1 906=head2 What is the difference between a list and an array?
907
908An array has a changeable length. A list does not. An array is something
909you can push or pop, while a list is a set of values. Some people make
910the distinction that a list is a value while an array is a variable.
911Subroutines are passed and return lists, you put things into list
912context, you initialize arrays with lists, and you foreach() across
913a list. C<@> variables are arrays, anonymous arrays are arrays, arrays
914in scalar context behave like the number of elements in them, subroutines
915access their arguments through the array C<@_>, push/pop/shift only work
916on arrays.
917
918As a side note, there's no such thing as a list in scalar context.
919When you say
920
921 $scalar = (2, 5, 7, 9);
922
d92eb7b0 923you're using the comma operator in scalar context, so it uses the scalar
924comma operator. There never was a list there at all! This causes the
925last value to be returned: 9.
65acb1b1 926
68dc0745 927=head2 What is the difference between $array[1] and @array[1]?
928
929The former is a scalar value, the latter an array slice, which makes
930it a list with one (scalar) value. You should use $ when you want a
931scalar value (most of the time) and @ when you want a list with one
932scalar value in it (very, very rarely; nearly never, in fact).
933
934Sometimes it doesn't make a difference, but sometimes it does.
935For example, compare:
936
937 $good[0] = `some program that outputs several lines`;
938
939with
940
941 @bad[0] = `same program that outputs several lines`;
942
9f1b1f2d 943The C<use warnings> pragma and the B<-w> flag will warn you about these
944matters.
68dc0745 945
d92eb7b0 946=head2 How can I remove duplicate elements from a list or array?
68dc0745 947
948There are several possible ways, depending on whether the array is
949ordered and whether you wish to preserve the ordering.
950
951=over 4
952
953=item a) If @in is sorted, and you want @out to be sorted:
5a964f20 954(this assumes all true values in the array)
68dc0745 955
956 $prev = 'nonesuch';
957 @out = grep($_ ne $prev && ($prev = $_), @in);
958
c8db1d39 959This is nice in that it doesn't use much extra memory, simulating
960uniq(1)'s behavior of removing only adjacent duplicates. It's less
961nice in that it won't work with false values like undef, 0, or "";
87275199 962"0 but true" is OK, though.
68dc0745 963
964=item b) If you don't know whether @in is sorted:
965
966 undef %saw;
967 @out = grep(!$saw{$_}++, @in);
968
969=item c) Like (b), but @in contains only small integers:
970
971 @out = grep(!$saw[$_]++, @in);
972
973=item d) A way to do (b) without any loops or greps:
974
975 undef %saw;
976 @saw{@in} = ();
977 @out = sort keys %saw; # remove sort if undesired
978
979=item e) Like (d), but @in contains only small positive integers:
980
981 undef @ary;
982 @ary[@in] = @in;
87275199 983 @out = grep {defined} @ary;
68dc0745 984
985=back
986
65acb1b1 987But perhaps you should have been using a hash all along, eh?
988
5a964f20 989=head2 How can I tell whether a list or array contains a certain element?
990
991Hearing the word "in" is an I<in>dication that you probably should have
992used a hash, not a list or array, to store your data. Hashes are
993designed to answer this question quickly and efficiently. Arrays aren't.
68dc0745 994
5a964f20 995That being said, there are several ways to approach this. If you
996are going to make this query many times over arbitrary string values,
997the fastest way is probably to invert the original array and keep an
68dc0745 998associative array lying about whose keys are the first array's values.
999
1000 @blues = qw/azure cerulean teal turquoise lapis-lazuli/;
1001 undef %is_blue;
1002 for (@blues) { $is_blue{$_} = 1 }
1003
1004Now you can check whether $is_blue{$some_color}. It might have been a
1005good idea to keep the blues all in a hash in the first place.
1006
1007If the values are all small integers, you could use a simple indexed
1008array. This kind of an array will take up less space:
1009
1010 @primes = (2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31);
1011 undef @is_tiny_prime;
d92eb7b0 1012 for (@primes) { $is_tiny_prime[$_] = 1 }
1013 # or simply @istiny_prime[@primes] = (1) x @primes;
68dc0745 1014
1015Now you check whether $is_tiny_prime[$some_number].
1016
1017If the values in question are integers instead of strings, you can save
1018quite a lot of space by using bit strings instead:
1019
1020 @articles = ( 1..10, 150..2000, 2017 );
1021 undef $read;
7b8d334a 1022 for (@articles) { vec($read,$_,1) = 1 }
68dc0745 1023
1024Now check whether C<vec($read,$n,1)> is true for some C<$n>.
1025
1026Please do not use
1027
1028 $is_there = grep $_ eq $whatever, @array;
1029
1030or worse yet
1031
1032 $is_there = grep /$whatever/, @array;
1033
1034These are slow (checks every element even if the first matches),
1035inefficient (same reason), and potentially buggy (what if there are
d92eb7b0 1036regex characters in $whatever?). If you're only testing once, then
65acb1b1 1037use:
1038
1039 $is_there = 0;
1040 foreach $elt (@array) {
1041 if ($elt eq $elt_to_find) {
1042 $is_there = 1;
1043 last;
1044 }
1045 }
1046 if ($is_there) { ... }
68dc0745 1047
1048=head2 How do I compute the difference of two arrays? How do I compute the intersection of two arrays?
1049
1050Use a hash. Here's code to do both and more. It assumes that
1051each element is unique in a given array:
1052
1053 @union = @intersection = @difference = ();
1054 %count = ();
1055 foreach $element (@array1, @array2) { $count{$element}++ }
1056 foreach $element (keys %count) {
1057 push @union, $element;
1058 push @{ $count{$element} > 1 ? \@intersection : \@difference }, $element;
1059 }
1060
d92eb7b0 1061Note that this is the I<symmetric difference>, that is, all elements in
1062either A or in B, but not in both. Think of it as an xor operation.
1063
65acb1b1 1064=head2 How do I test whether two arrays or hashes are equal?
1065
1066The following code works for single-level arrays. It uses a stringwise
1067comparison, and does not distinguish defined versus undefined empty
1068strings. Modify if you have other needs.
1069
1070 $are_equal = compare_arrays(\@frogs, \@toads);
1071
1072 sub compare_arrays {
1073 my ($first, $second) = @_;
9f1b1f2d 1074 no warnings; # silence spurious -w undef complaints
65acb1b1 1075 return 0 unless @$first == @$second;
1076 for (my $i = 0; $i < @$first; $i++) {
1077 return 0 if $first->[$i] ne $second->[$i];
1078 }
1079 return 1;
1080 }
1081
1082For multilevel structures, you may wish to use an approach more
1083like this one. It uses the CPAN module FreezeThaw:
1084
1085 use FreezeThaw qw(cmpStr);
1086 @a = @b = ( "this", "that", [ "more", "stuff" ] );
1087
1088 printf "a and b contain %s arrays\n",
1089 cmpStr(\@a, \@b) == 0
1090 ? "the same"
1091 : "different";
1092
1093This approach also works for comparing hashes. Here
1094we'll demonstrate two different answers:
1095
1096 use FreezeThaw qw(cmpStr cmpStrHard);
1097
1098 %a = %b = ( "this" => "that", "extra" => [ "more", "stuff" ] );
1099 $a{EXTRA} = \%b;
1100 $b{EXTRA} = \%a;
1101
1102 printf "a and b contain %s hashes\n",
1103 cmpStr(\%a, \%b) == 0 ? "the same" : "different";
1104
1105 printf "a and b contain %s hashes\n",
1106 cmpStrHard(\%a, \%b) == 0 ? "the same" : "different";
1107
1108
1109The first reports that both those the hashes contain the same data,
1110while the second reports that they do not. Which you prefer is left as
1111an exercise to the reader.
1112
68dc0745 1113=head2 How do I find the first array element for which a condition is true?
1114
1115You can use this if you care about the index:
1116
65acb1b1 1117 for ($i= 0; $i < @array; $i++) {
68dc0745 1118 if ($array[$i] eq "Waldo") {
1119 $found_index = $i;
1120 last;
1121 }
1122 }
1123
1124Now C<$found_index> has what you want.
1125
1126=head2 How do I handle linked lists?
1127
1128In general, you usually don't need a linked list in Perl, since with
1129regular arrays, you can push and pop or shift and unshift at either end,
5a964f20 1130or you can use splice to add and/or remove arbitrary number of elements at
87275199 1131arbitrary points. Both pop and shift are both O(1) operations on Perl's
5a964f20 1132dynamic arrays. In the absence of shifts and pops, push in general
1133needs to reallocate on the order every log(N) times, and unshift will
1134need to copy pointers each time.
68dc0745 1135
1136If you really, really wanted, you could use structures as described in
1137L<perldsc> or L<perltoot> and do just what the algorithm book tells you
65acb1b1 1138to do. For example, imagine a list node like this:
1139
1140 $node = {
1141 VALUE => 42,
1142 LINK => undef,
1143 };
1144
1145You could walk the list this way:
1146
1147 print "List: ";
1148 for ($node = $head; $node; $node = $node->{LINK}) {
1149 print $node->{VALUE}, " ";
1150 }
1151 print "\n";
1152
1153You could grow the list this way:
1154
1155 my ($head, $tail);
1156 $tail = append($head, 1); # grow a new head
1157 for $value ( 2 .. 10 ) {
1158 $tail = append($tail, $value);
1159 }
1160
1161 sub append {
1162 my($list, $value) = @_;
1163 my $node = { VALUE => $value };
1164 if ($list) {
1165 $node->{LINK} = $list->{LINK};
1166 $list->{LINK} = $node;
1167 } else {
1168 $_[0] = $node; # replace caller's version
1169 }
1170 return $node;
1171 }
1172
1173But again, Perl's built-in are virtually always good enough.
68dc0745 1174
1175=head2 How do I handle circular lists?
1176
1177Circular lists could be handled in the traditional fashion with linked
1178lists, or you could just do something like this with an array:
1179
1180 unshift(@array, pop(@array)); # the last shall be first
1181 push(@array, shift(@array)); # and vice versa
1182
1183=head2 How do I shuffle an array randomly?
1184
5a964f20 1185Use this:
1186
1187 # fisher_yates_shuffle( \@array ) :
1188 # generate a random permutation of @array in place
1189 sub fisher_yates_shuffle {
1190 my $array = shift;
1191 my $i;
1192 for ($i = @$array; --$i; ) {
1193 my $j = int rand ($i+1);
1194 next if $i == $j;
1195 @$array[$i,$j] = @$array[$j,$i];
1196 }
1197 }
1198
1199 fisher_yates_shuffle( \@array ); # permutes @array in place
1200
d92eb7b0 1201You've probably seen shuffling algorithms that work using splice,
68dc0745 1202randomly picking another element to swap the current element with:
1203
1204 srand;
1205 @new = ();
1206 @old = 1 .. 10; # just a demo
1207 while (@old) {
1208 push(@new, splice(@old, rand @old, 1));
1209 }
1210
5a964f20 1211This is bad because splice is already O(N), and since you do it N times,
1212you just invented a quadratic algorithm; that is, O(N**2). This does
1213not scale, although Perl is so efficient that you probably won't notice
1214this until you have rather largish arrays.
68dc0745 1215
1216=head2 How do I process/modify each element of an array?
1217
1218Use C<for>/C<foreach>:
1219
1220 for (@lines) {
5a964f20 1221 s/foo/bar/; # change that word
1222 y/XZ/ZX/; # swap those letters
68dc0745 1223 }
1224
1225Here's another; let's compute spherical volumes:
1226
5a964f20 1227 for (@volumes = @radii) { # @volumes has changed parts
68dc0745 1228 $_ **= 3;
1229 $_ *= (4/3) * 3.14159; # this will be constant folded
1230 }
1231
5a964f20 1232If you want to do the same thing to modify the values of the hash,
1233you may not use the C<values> function, oddly enough. You need a slice:
1234
1235 for $orbit ( @orbits{keys %orbits} ) {
1236 ($orbit **= 3) *= (4/3) * 3.14159;
1237 }
1238
68dc0745 1239=head2 How do I select a random element from an array?
1240
1241Use the rand() function (see L<perlfunc/rand>):
1242
5a964f20 1243 # at the top of the program:
68dc0745 1244 srand; # not needed for 5.004 and later
5a964f20 1245
1246 # then later on
68dc0745 1247 $index = rand @array;
1248 $element = $array[$index];
1249
5a964f20 1250Make sure you I<only call srand once per program, if then>.
1251If you are calling it more than once (such as before each
1252call to rand), you're almost certainly doing something wrong.
1253
68dc0745 1254=head2 How do I permute N elements of a list?
1255
1256Here's a little program that generates all permutations
1257of all the words on each line of input. The algorithm embodied
5a964f20 1258in the permute() function should work on any list:
68dc0745 1259
1260 #!/usr/bin/perl -n
5a964f20 1261 # tsc-permute: permute each word of input
1262 permute([split], []);
1263 sub permute {
1264 my @items = @{ $_[0] };
1265 my @perms = @{ $_[1] };
1266 unless (@items) {
1267 print "@perms\n";
68dc0745 1268 } else {
5a964f20 1269 my(@newitems,@newperms,$i);
1270 foreach $i (0 .. $#items) {
1271 @newitems = @items;
1272 @newperms = @perms;
1273 unshift(@newperms, splice(@newitems, $i, 1));
1274 permute([@newitems], [@newperms]);
68dc0745 1275 }
1276 }
1277 }
1278
1279=head2 How do I sort an array by (anything)?
1280
1281Supply a comparison function to sort() (described in L<perlfunc/sort>):
1282
1283 @list = sort { $a <=> $b } @list;
1284
1285The default sort function is cmp, string comparison, which would
c47ff5f1 1286sort C<(1, 2, 10)> into C<(1, 10, 2)>. C<< <=> >>, used above, is
68dc0745 1287the numerical comparison operator.
1288
1289If you have a complicated function needed to pull out the part you
1290want to sort on, then don't do it inside the sort function. Pull it
1291out first, because the sort BLOCK can be called many times for the
1292same element. Here's an example of how to pull out the first word
1293after the first number on each item, and then sort those words
1294case-insensitively.
1295
1296 @idx = ();
1297 for (@data) {
1298 ($item) = /\d+\s*(\S+)/;
1299 push @idx, uc($item);
1300 }
1301 @sorted = @data[ sort { $idx[$a] cmp $idx[$b] } 0 .. $#idx ];
1302
1303Which could also be written this way, using a trick
1304that's come to be known as the Schwartzian Transform:
1305
1306 @sorted = map { $_->[0] }
1307 sort { $a->[1] cmp $b->[1] }
d92eb7b0 1308 map { [ $_, uc( (/\d+\s*(\S+)/)[0]) ] } @data;
68dc0745 1309
1310If you need to sort on several fields, the following paradigm is useful.
1311
1312 @sorted = sort { field1($a) <=> field1($b) ||
1313 field2($a) cmp field2($b) ||
1314 field3($a) cmp field3($b)
1315 } @data;
1316
1317This can be conveniently combined with precalculation of keys as given
1318above.
1319
1320See http://www.perl.com/CPAN/doc/FMTEYEWTK/sort.html for more about
1321this approach.
1322
1323See also the question below on sorting hashes.
1324
1325=head2 How do I manipulate arrays of bits?
1326
1327Use pack() and unpack(), or else vec() and the bitwise operations.
1328
1329For example, this sets $vec to have bit N set if $ints[N] was set:
1330
1331 $vec = '';
1332 foreach(@ints) { vec($vec,$_,1) = 1 }
1333
1334And here's how, given a vector in $vec, you can
1335get those bits into your @ints array:
1336
1337 sub bitvec_to_list {
1338 my $vec = shift;
1339 my @ints;
1340 # Find null-byte density then select best algorithm
1341 if ($vec =~ tr/\0// / length $vec > 0.95) {
1342 use integer;
1343 my $i;
1344 # This method is faster with mostly null-bytes
1345 while($vec =~ /[^\0]/g ) {
1346 $i = -9 + 8 * pos $vec;
1347 push @ints, $i if vec($vec, ++$i, 1);
1348 push @ints, $i if vec($vec, ++$i, 1);
1349 push @ints, $i if vec($vec, ++$i, 1);
1350 push @ints, $i if vec($vec, ++$i, 1);
1351 push @ints, $i if vec($vec, ++$i, 1);
1352 push @ints, $i if vec($vec, ++$i, 1);
1353 push @ints, $i if vec($vec, ++$i, 1);
1354 push @ints, $i if vec($vec, ++$i, 1);
1355 }
1356 } else {
1357 # This method is a fast general algorithm
1358 use integer;
1359 my $bits = unpack "b*", $vec;
1360 push @ints, 0 if $bits =~ s/^(\d)// && $1;
1361 push @ints, pos $bits while($bits =~ /1/g);
1362 }
1363 return \@ints;
1364 }
1365
1366This method gets faster the more sparse the bit vector is.
1367(Courtesy of Tim Bunce and Winfried Koenig.)
1368
65acb1b1 1369Here's a demo on how to use vec():
1370
1371 # vec demo
1372 $vector = "\xff\x0f\xef\xfe";
1373 print "Ilya's string \\xff\\x0f\\xef\\xfe represents the number ",
1374 unpack("N", $vector), "\n";
1375 $is_set = vec($vector, 23, 1);
1376 print "Its 23rd bit is ", $is_set ? "set" : "clear", ".\n";
1377 pvec($vector);
1378
1379 set_vec(1,1,1);
1380 set_vec(3,1,1);
1381 set_vec(23,1,1);
1382
1383 set_vec(3,1,3);
1384 set_vec(3,2,3);
1385 set_vec(3,4,3);
1386 set_vec(3,4,7);
1387 set_vec(3,8,3);
1388 set_vec(3,8,7);
1389
1390 set_vec(0,32,17);
1391 set_vec(1,32,17);
1392
1393 sub set_vec {
1394 my ($offset, $width, $value) = @_;
1395 my $vector = '';
1396 vec($vector, $offset, $width) = $value;
1397 print "offset=$offset width=$width value=$value\n";
1398 pvec($vector);
1399 }
1400
1401 sub pvec {
1402 my $vector = shift;
1403 my $bits = unpack("b*", $vector);
1404 my $i = 0;
1405 my $BASE = 8;
1406
1407 print "vector length in bytes: ", length($vector), "\n";
1408 @bytes = unpack("A8" x length($vector), $bits);
1409 print "bits are: @bytes\n\n";
1410 }
1411
68dc0745 1412=head2 Why does defined() return true on empty arrays and hashes?
1413
65acb1b1 1414The short story is that you should probably only use defined on scalars or
1415functions, not on aggregates (arrays and hashes). See L<perlfunc/defined>
1416in the 5.004 release or later of Perl for more detail.
68dc0745 1417
1418=head1 Data: Hashes (Associative Arrays)
1419
1420=head2 How do I process an entire hash?
1421
1422Use the each() function (see L<perlfunc/each>) if you don't care
1423whether it's sorted:
1424
5a964f20 1425 while ( ($key, $value) = each %hash) {
68dc0745 1426 print "$key = $value\n";
1427 }
1428
1429If you want it sorted, you'll have to use foreach() on the result of
1430sorting the keys as shown in an earlier question.
1431
1432=head2 What happens if I add or remove keys from a hash while iterating over it?
1433
d92eb7b0 1434Don't do that. :-)
1435
1436[lwall] In Perl 4, you were not allowed to modify a hash at all while
87275199 1437iterating over it. In Perl 5 you can delete from it, but you still
d92eb7b0 1438can't add to it, because that might cause a doubling of the hash table,
1439in which half the entries get copied up to the new top half of the
87275199 1440table, at which point you've totally bamboozled the iterator code.
d92eb7b0 1441Even if the table doesn't double, there's no telling whether your new
1442entry will be inserted before or after the current iterator position.
1443
1444Either treasure up your changes and make them after the iterator finishes,
1445or use keys to fetch all the old keys at once, and iterate over the list
1446of keys.
68dc0745 1447
1448=head2 How do I look up a hash element by value?
1449
1450Create a reverse hash:
1451
1452 %by_value = reverse %by_key;
1453 $key = $by_value{$value};
1454
1455That's not particularly efficient. It would be more space-efficient
1456to use:
1457
1458 while (($key, $value) = each %by_key) {
1459 $by_value{$value} = $key;
1460 }
1461
d92eb7b0 1462If your hash could have repeated values, the methods above will only find
1463one of the associated keys. This may or may not worry you. If it does
1464worry you, you can always reverse the hash into a hash of arrays instead:
1465
1466 while (($key, $value) = each %by_key) {
1467 push @{$key_list_by_value{$value}}, $key;
1468 }
68dc0745 1469
1470=head2 How can I know how many entries are in a hash?
1471
1472If you mean how many keys, then all you have to do is
1473take the scalar sense of the keys() function:
1474
3fe9a6f1 1475 $num_keys = scalar keys %hash;
68dc0745 1476
d92eb7b0 1477In void context, the keys() function just resets the iterator, which is
1478faster for tied hashes than would be iterating through the whole
1479hash, one key-value pair at a time.
68dc0745 1480
1481=head2 How do I sort a hash (optionally by value instead of key)?
1482
1483Internally, hashes are stored in a way that prevents you from imposing
1484an order on key-value pairs. Instead, you have to sort a list of the
1485keys or values:
1486
1487 @keys = sort keys %hash; # sorted by key
1488 @keys = sort {
1489 $hash{$a} cmp $hash{$b}
1490 } keys %hash; # and by value
1491
1492Here we'll do a reverse numeric sort by value, and if two keys are
1493identical, sort by length of key, and if that fails, by straight ASCII
1494comparison of the keys (well, possibly modified by your locale -- see
1495L<perllocale>).
1496
1497 @keys = sort {
1498 $hash{$b} <=> $hash{$a}
1499 ||
1500 length($b) <=> length($a)
1501 ||
1502 $a cmp $b
1503 } keys %hash;
1504
1505=head2 How can I always keep my hash sorted?
1506
1507You can look into using the DB_File module and tie() using the
1508$DB_BTREE hash bindings as documented in L<DB_File/"In Memory Databases">.
5a964f20 1509The Tie::IxHash module from CPAN might also be instructive.
68dc0745 1510
1511=head2 What's the difference between "delete" and "undef" with hashes?
1512
1513Hashes are pairs of scalars: the first is the key, the second is the
1514value. The key will be coerced to a string, although the value can be
1515any kind of scalar: string, number, or reference. If a key C<$key> is
1516present in the array, C<exists($key)> will return true. The value for
1517a given key can be C<undef>, in which case C<$array{$key}> will be
1518C<undef> while C<$exists{$key}> will return true. This corresponds to
1519(C<$key>, C<undef>) being in the hash.
1520
1521Pictures help... here's the C<%ary> table:
1522
1523 keys values
1524 +------+------+
1525 | a | 3 |
1526 | x | 7 |
1527 | d | 0 |
1528 | e | 2 |
1529 +------+------+
1530
1531And these conditions hold
1532
1533 $ary{'a'} is true
1534 $ary{'d'} is false
1535 defined $ary{'d'} is true
1536 defined $ary{'a'} is true
87275199 1537 exists $ary{'a'} is true (Perl5 only)
68dc0745 1538 grep ($_ eq 'a', keys %ary) is true
1539
1540If you now say
1541
1542 undef $ary{'a'}
1543
1544your table now reads:
1545
1546
1547 keys values
1548 +------+------+
1549 | a | undef|
1550 | x | 7 |
1551 | d | 0 |
1552 | e | 2 |
1553 +------+------+
1554
1555and these conditions now hold; changes in caps:
1556
1557 $ary{'a'} is FALSE
1558 $ary{'d'} is false
1559 defined $ary{'d'} is true
1560 defined $ary{'a'} is FALSE
87275199 1561 exists $ary{'a'} is true (Perl5 only)
68dc0745 1562 grep ($_ eq 'a', keys %ary) is true
1563
1564Notice the last two: you have an undef value, but a defined key!
1565
1566Now, consider this:
1567
1568 delete $ary{'a'}
1569
1570your table now reads:
1571
1572 keys values
1573 +------+------+
1574 | x | 7 |
1575 | d | 0 |
1576 | e | 2 |
1577 +------+------+
1578
1579and these conditions now hold; changes in caps:
1580
1581 $ary{'a'} is false
1582 $ary{'d'} is false
1583 defined $ary{'d'} is true
1584 defined $ary{'a'} is false
87275199 1585 exists $ary{'a'} is FALSE (Perl5 only)
68dc0745 1586 grep ($_ eq 'a', keys %ary) is FALSE
1587
1588See, the whole entry is gone!
1589
1590=head2 Why don't my tied hashes make the defined/exists distinction?
1591
1592They may or may not implement the EXISTS() and DEFINED() methods
1593differently. For example, there isn't the concept of undef with hashes
1594that are tied to DBM* files. This means the true/false tables above
1595will give different results when used on such a hash. It also means
1596that exists and defined do the same thing with a DBM* file, and what
1597they end up doing is not what they do with ordinary hashes.
1598
1599=head2 How do I reset an each() operation part-way through?
1600
5a964f20 1601Using C<keys %hash> in scalar context returns the number of keys in
68dc0745 1602the hash I<and> resets the iterator associated with the hash. You may
1603need to do this if you use C<last> to exit a loop early so that when you
46fc3d4c 1604re-enter it, the hash iterator has been reset.
68dc0745 1605
1606=head2 How can I get the unique keys from two hashes?
1607
d92eb7b0 1608First you extract the keys from the hashes into lists, then solve
1609the "removing duplicates" problem described above. For example:
68dc0745 1610
1611 %seen = ();
1612 for $element (keys(%foo), keys(%bar)) {
1613 $seen{$element}++;
1614 }
1615 @uniq = keys %seen;
1616
1617Or more succinctly:
1618
1619 @uniq = keys %{{%foo,%bar}};
1620
1621Or if you really want to save space:
1622
1623 %seen = ();
1624 while (defined ($key = each %foo)) {
1625 $seen{$key}++;
1626 }
1627 while (defined ($key = each %bar)) {
1628 $seen{$key}++;
1629 }
1630 @uniq = keys %seen;
1631
1632=head2 How can I store a multidimensional array in a DBM file?
1633
1634Either stringify the structure yourself (no fun), or else
1635get the MLDBM (which uses Data::Dumper) module from CPAN and layer
1636it on top of either DB_File or GDBM_File.
1637
1638=head2 How can I make my hash remember the order I put elements into it?
1639
1640Use the Tie::IxHash from CPAN.
1641
46fc3d4c 1642 use Tie::IxHash;
1643 tie(%myhash, Tie::IxHash);
1644 for ($i=0; $i<20; $i++) {
1645 $myhash{$i} = 2*$i;
1646 }
1647 @keys = keys %myhash;
1648 # @keys = (0,1,2,3,...)
1649
68dc0745 1650=head2 Why does passing a subroutine an undefined element in a hash create it?
1651
1652If you say something like:
1653
1654 somefunc($hash{"nonesuch key here"});
1655
1656Then that element "autovivifies"; that is, it springs into existence
1657whether you store something there or not. That's because functions
1658get scalars passed in by reference. If somefunc() modifies C<$_[0]>,
1659it has to be ready to write it back into the caller's version.
1660
87275199 1661This has been fixed as of Perl5.004.
68dc0745 1662
1663Normally, merely accessing a key's value for a nonexistent key does
1664I<not> cause that key to be forever there. This is different than
1665awk's behavior.
1666
fc36a67e 1667=head2 How can I make the Perl equivalent of a C structure/C++ class/hash or array of hashes or arrays?
68dc0745 1668
65acb1b1 1669Usually a hash ref, perhaps like this:
1670
1671 $record = {
1672 NAME => "Jason",
1673 EMPNO => 132,
1674 TITLE => "deputy peon",
1675 AGE => 23,
1676 SALARY => 37_000,
1677 PALS => [ "Norbert", "Rhys", "Phineas"],
1678 };
1679
1680References are documented in L<perlref> and the upcoming L<perlreftut>.
1681Examples of complex data structures are given in L<perldsc> and
1682L<perllol>. Examples of structures and object-oriented classes are
1683in L<perltoot>.
68dc0745 1684
1685=head2 How can I use a reference as a hash key?
1686
1687You can't do this directly, but you could use the standard Tie::Refhash
87275199 1688module distributed with Perl.
68dc0745 1689
1690=head1 Data: Misc
1691
1692=head2 How do I handle binary data correctly?
1693
1694Perl is binary clean, so this shouldn't be a problem. For example,
1695this works fine (assuming the files are found):
1696
1697 if (`cat /vmunix` =~ /gzip/) {
1698 print "Your kernel is GNU-zip enabled!\n";
1699 }
1700
d92eb7b0 1701On less elegant (read: Byzantine) systems, however, you have
1702to play tedious games with "text" versus "binary" files. See
1703L<perlfunc/"binmode"> or L<perlopentut>. Most of these ancient-thinking
1704systems are curses out of Microsoft, who seem to be committed to putting
1705the backward into backward compatibility.
68dc0745 1706
1707If you're concerned about 8-bit ASCII data, then see L<perllocale>.
1708
54310121 1709If you want to deal with multibyte characters, however, there are
68dc0745 1710some gotchas. See the section on Regular Expressions.
1711
1712=head2 How do I determine whether a scalar is a number/whole/integer/float?
1713
1714Assuming that you don't care about IEEE notations like "NaN" or
1715"Infinity", you probably just want to use a regular expression.
1716
65acb1b1 1717 if (/\D/) { print "has nondigits\n" }
1718 if (/^\d+$/) { print "is a whole number\n" }
1719 if (/^-?\d+$/) { print "is an integer\n" }
1720 if (/^[+-]?\d+$/) { print "is a +/- integer\n" }
1721 if (/^-?\d+\.?\d*$/) { print "is a real number\n" }
1722 if (/^-?(?:\d+(?:\.\d*)?|\.\d+)$/) { print "is a decimal number" }
1723 if (/^([+-]?)(?=\d|\.\d)\d*(\.\d*)?([Ee]([+-]?\d+))?$/)
1724 { print "a C float" }
68dc0745 1725
5a964f20 1726If you're on a POSIX system, Perl's supports the C<POSIX::strtod>
1727function. Its semantics are somewhat cumbersome, so here's a C<getnum>
1728wrapper function for more convenient access. This function takes
1729a string and returns the number it found, or C<undef> for input that
1730isn't a C float. The C<is_numeric> function is a front end to C<getnum>
1731if you just want to say, ``Is this a float?''
1732
1733 sub getnum {
1734 use POSIX qw(strtod);
1735 my $str = shift;
1736 $str =~ s/^\s+//;
1737 $str =~ s/\s+$//;
1738 $! = 0;
1739 my($num, $unparsed) = strtod($str);
1740 if (($str eq '') || ($unparsed != 0) || $!) {
1741 return undef;
1742 } else {
1743 return $num;
1744 }
1745 }
1746
072dc14b 1747 sub is_numeric { defined getnum($_[0]) }
5a964f20 1748
6cecdcac 1749Or you could check out the String::Scanf module on CPAN instead. The
1750POSIX module (part of the standard Perl distribution) provides the
1751C<strtol> and C<strtod> for converting strings to double and longs,
1752respectively.
68dc0745 1753
1754=head2 How do I keep persistent data across program calls?
1755
1756For some specific applications, you can use one of the DBM modules.
65acb1b1 1757See L<AnyDBM_File>. More generically, you should consult the FreezeThaw,
1758Storable, or Class::Eroot modules from CPAN. Here's one example using
1759Storable's C<store> and C<retrieve> functions:
1760
1761 use Storable;
1762 store(\%hash, "filename");
1763
1764 # later on...
1765 $href = retrieve("filename"); # by ref
1766 %hash = %{ retrieve("filename") }; # direct to hash
68dc0745 1767
1768=head2 How do I print out or copy a recursive data structure?
1769
65acb1b1 1770The Data::Dumper module on CPAN (or the 5.005 release of Perl) is great
1771for printing out data structures. The Storable module, found on CPAN,
1772provides a function called C<dclone> that recursively copies its argument.
1773
1774 use Storable qw(dclone);
1775 $r2 = dclone($r1);
68dc0745 1776
65acb1b1 1777Where $r1 can be a reference to any kind of data structure you'd like.
1778It will be deeply copied. Because C<dclone> takes and returns references,
1779you'd have to add extra punctuation if you had a hash of arrays that
1780you wanted to copy.
68dc0745 1781
65acb1b1 1782 %newhash = %{ dclone(\%oldhash) };
68dc0745 1783
1784=head2 How do I define methods for every class/object?
1785
1786Use the UNIVERSAL class (see L<UNIVERSAL>).
1787
1788=head2 How do I verify a credit card checksum?
1789
1790Get the Business::CreditCard module from CPAN.
1791
65acb1b1 1792=head2 How do I pack arrays of doubles or floats for XS code?
1793
1794The kgbpack.c code in the PGPLOT module on CPAN does just this.
1795If you're doing a lot of float or double processing, consider using
1796the PDL module from CPAN instead--it makes number-crunching easy.
1797
68dc0745 1798=head1 AUTHOR AND COPYRIGHT
1799
65acb1b1 1800Copyright (c) 1997-1999 Tom Christiansen and Nathan Torkington.
5a964f20 1801All rights reserved.
1802
1803When included as part of the Standard Version of Perl, or as part of
1804its complete documentation whether printed or otherwise, this work
d92eb7b0 1805may be distributed only under the terms of Perl's Artistic License.
5a964f20 1806Any distribution of this file or derivatives thereof I<outside>
1807of that package require that special arrangements be made with
1808copyright holder.
1809
1810Irrespective of its distribution, all code examples in this file
1811are hereby placed into the public domain. You are permitted and
1812encouraged to use this code in your own programs for fun
1813or for profit as you see fit. A simple comment in the code giving
1814credit would be courteous but is not required.