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bfe16a1a 1=head1 NAME
2
3perlintro -- a brief introduction and overview of Perl
4
5=head1 DESCRIPTION
6
7This document is intended to give you a quick overview of the Perl
8programming language, along with pointers to further documentation. It
9is intended as a "bootstrap" guide for those who are new to the
10language, and provides just enough information for you to be able to
11read other peoples' Perl and understand roughly what it's doing, or
12write your own simple scripts.
13
14This introductory document does not aim to be complete. It does not
15even aim to be entirely accurate. In some cases perfection has been
16sacrificed in the goal of getting the general idea across. You are
98fcdafd 17I<strongly> advised to follow this introduction with more information
bfe16a1a 18from the full Perl manual, the table of contents to which can be found
19in L<perltoc>.
20
41489bc0 21Throughout this document you'll see references to other parts of the
bfe16a1a 22Perl documentation. You can read that documentation using the C<perldoc>
98fcdafd 23command or whatever method you're using to read this document.
bfe16a1a 24
25=head2 What is Perl?
26
41489bc0 27Perl is a general-purpose programming language originally developed for
28text manipulation and now used for a wide range of tasks including
29system administration, web development, network programming, GUI
bfe16a1a 30development, and more.
31
98fcdafd 32The language is intended to be practical (easy to use, efficient,
33complete) rather than beautiful (tiny, elegant, minimal). Its major
34features are that it's easy to use, supports both procedural and
35object-oriented (OO) programming, has powerful built-in support for text
36processing, and has one of the world's most impressive collections of
37third-party modules.
bfe16a1a 38
41489bc0 39Different definitions of Perl are given in L<perl>, L<perlfaq1> and
40no doubt other places. From this we can determine that Perl is different
bfe16a1a 41things to different people, but that lots of people think it's at least
42worth writing about.
43
44=head2 Running Perl programs
45
46To run a Perl program from the Unix command line:
47
48 perl progname.pl
49
50Alternatively, put this as the first line of your script:
51
52 #!/usr/bin/env perl
53
54... and run the script as C</path/to/script.pl>. Of course, it'll need
55to be executable first, so C<chmod 755 script.pl> (under Unix).
56
51370f99 57(This start line assumes you have the B<env> program. You can also put
58directly the path to your perl executable, like in C<#!/usr/bin/perl>).
59
bfe16a1a 60For more information, including instructions for other platforms such as
8939ba94 61Windows and Mac OS, read L<perlrun>.
bfe16a1a 62
41489bc0 63=head2 Safety net
64
64446524 65Perl by default is very forgiving. In order to make it more robust
d699aa5b 66it is recommended to start every program with the following lines:
41489bc0 67
68 #!/usr/bin/perl
69 use strict;
70 use warnings;
71
64446524 72The two additional lines request from perl to catch various common
73problems in your code. They check different things so you need both. A
74potential problem caught by C<use strict;> will cause your code to stop
75immediately when it is encountered, while C<use warnings;> will merely
76give a warning (like the command-line switch B<-w>) and let your code run.
77To read more about them check their respective manual pages at L<strict>
78and L<warnings>.
41489bc0 79
bfe16a1a 80=head2 Basic syntax overview
81
82A Perl script or program consists of one or more statements. These
83statements are simply written in the script in a straightforward
98fcdafd 84fashion. There is no need to have a C<main()> function or anything of
85that kind.
bfe16a1a 86
87Perl statements end in a semi-colon:
88
89 print "Hello, world";
90
91Comments start with a hash symbol and run to the end of the line
92
93 # This is a comment
94
95Whitespace is irrelevant:
96
41489bc0 97 print
bfe16a1a 98 "Hello, world"
99 ;
100
101... except inside quoted strings:
102
103 # this would print with a linebreak in the middle
104 print "Hello
105 world";
106
107Double quotes or single quotes may be used around literal strings:
108
109 print "Hello, world";
110 print 'Hello, world';
111
112However, only double quotes "interpolate" variables and special
113characters such as newlines (C<\n>):
114
115 print "Hello, $name\n"; # works fine
116 print 'Hello, $name\n'; # prints $name\n literally
117
118Numbers don't need quotes around them:
119
120 print 42;
121
122You can use parentheses for functions' arguments or omit them
41489bc0 123according to your personal taste. They are only required
bfe16a1a 124occasionally to clarify issues of precedence.
125
126 print("Hello, world\n");
127 print "Hello, world\n";
128
129More detailed information about Perl syntax can be found in L<perlsyn>.
130
131=head2 Perl variable types
132
133Perl has three main variable types: scalars, arrays, and hashes.
134
135=over 4
136
137=item Scalars
138
139A scalar represents a single value:
140
141 my $animal = "camel";
142 my $answer = 42;
143
41489bc0 144Scalar values can be strings, integers or floating point numbers, and Perl
145will automatically convert between them as required. There is no need
146to pre-declare your variable types, but you have to declare them using
147the C<my> keyword the first time you use them. (This is one of the
148requirements of C<use strict;>.)
bfe16a1a 149
150Scalar values can be used in various ways:
151
152 print $animal;
153 print "The animal is $animal\n";
154 print "The square of $answer is ", $answer * $answer, "\n";
155
156There are a number of "magic" scalars with names that look like
157punctuation or line noise. These special variables are used for all
158kinds of purposes, and are documented in L<perlvar>. The only one you
159need to know about for now is C<$_> which is the "default variable".
160It's used as the default argument to a number of functions in Perl, and
41489bc0 161it's set implicitly by certain looping constructs.
bfe16a1a 162
163 print; # prints contents of $_ by default
164
165=item Arrays
166
167An array represents a list of values:
168
169 my @animals = ("camel", "llama", "owl");
170 my @numbers = (23, 42, 69);
171 my @mixed = ("camel", 42, 1.23);
172
173Arrays are zero-indexed. Here's how you get at elements in an array:
174
175 print $animals[0]; # prints "camel"
176 print $animals[1]; # prints "llama"
177
41489bc0 178The special variable C<$#array> tells you the index of the last element
bfe16a1a 179of an array:
180
181 print $mixed[$#mixed]; # last element, prints 1.23
182
41489bc0 183You might be tempted to use C<$#array + 1> to tell you how many items there
bfe16a1a 184are in an array. Don't bother. As it happens, using C<@array> where Perl
185expects to find a scalar value ("in scalar context") will give you the number
186of elements in the array:
187
188 if (@animals < 5) { ... }
189
41489bc0 190The elements we're getting from the array start with a C<$> because
ac036724 191we're getting just a single value out of the array; you ask for a scalar,
bfe16a1a 192you get a scalar.
193
d1be9408 194To get multiple values from an array:
bfe16a1a 195
196 @animals[0,1]; # gives ("camel", "llama");
197 @animals[0..2]; # gives ("camel", "llama", "owl");
198 @animals[1..$#animals]; # gives all except the first element
199
200This is called an "array slice".
201
202You can do various useful things to lists:
203
204 my @sorted = sort @animals;
205 my @backwards = reverse @numbers;
206
207There are a couple of special arrays too, such as C<@ARGV> (the command
208line arguments to your script) and C<@_> (the arguments passed to a
209subroutine). These are documented in L<perlvar>.
210
211=item Hashes
212
213A hash represents a set of key/value pairs:
214
215 my %fruit_color = ("apple", "red", "banana", "yellow");
216
217You can use whitespace and the C<< => >> operator to lay them out more
218nicely:
219
220 my %fruit_color = (
221 apple => "red",
222 banana => "yellow",
223 );
224
225To get at hash elements:
226
227 $fruit_color{"apple"}; # gives "red"
228
229You can get at lists of keys and values with C<keys()> and
230C<values()>.
231
232 my @fruits = keys %fruit_colors;
233 my @colors = values %fruit_colors;
234
235Hashes have no particular internal order, though you can sort the keys
236and loop through them.
237
41489bc0 238Just like special scalars and arrays, there are also special hashes.
bfe16a1a 239The most well known of these is C<%ENV> which contains environment
240variables. Read all about it (and other special variables) in
241L<perlvar>.
242
243=back
244
245Scalars, arrays and hashes are documented more fully in L<perldata>.
246
247More complex data types can be constructed using references, which allow
248you to build lists and hashes within lists and hashes.
249
250A reference is a scalar value and can refer to any other Perl data
251type. So by storing a reference as the value of an array or hash
41489bc0 252element, you can easily create lists and hashes within lists and
bfe16a1a 253hashes. The following example shows a 2 level hash of hash
254structure using anonymous hash references.
255
256 my $variables = {
41489bc0 257 scalar => {
bfe16a1a 258 description => "single item",
259 sigil => '$',
260 },
261 array => {
262 description => "ordered list of items",
263 sigil => '@',
264 },
265 hash => {
266 description => "key/value pairs",
267 sigil => '%',
268 },
269 };
270
271 print "Scalars begin with a $variables->{'scalar'}->{'sigil'}\n";
272
273Exhaustive information on the topic of references can be found in
274L<perlreftut>, L<perllol>, L<perlref> and L<perldsc>.
275
276=head2 Variable scoping
277
278Throughout the previous section all the examples have used the syntax:
279
280 my $var = "value";
281
282The C<my> is actually not required; you could just use:
283
284 $var = "value";
285
286However, the above usage will create global variables throughout your
287program, which is bad programming practice. C<my> creates lexically
288scoped variables instead. The variables are scoped to the block
289(i.e. a bunch of statements surrounded by curly-braces) in which they
290are defined.
291
41489bc0 292 my $x = "foo";
293 my $some_condition = 1;
bfe16a1a 294 if ($some_condition) {
41489bc0 295 my $y = "bar";
296 print $x; # prints "foo"
297 print $y; # prints "bar"
bfe16a1a 298 }
41489bc0 299 print $x; # prints "foo"
300 print $y; # prints nothing; $y has fallen out of scope
bfe16a1a 301
302Using C<my> in combination with a C<use strict;> at the top of
41489bc0 303your Perl scripts means that the interpreter will pick up certain common
bfe16a1a 304programming errors. For instance, in the example above, the final
432fb0a0 305C<print $y> would cause a compile-time error and prevent you from
bfe16a1a 306running the program. Using C<strict> is highly recommended.
307
308=head2 Conditional and looping constructs
309
310Perl has most of the usual conditional and looping constructs except for
98fcdafd 311case/switch (but if you really want it, there is a Switch module in Perl
3125.8 and newer, and on CPAN. See the section on modules, below, for more
313information about modules and CPAN).
bfe16a1a 314
315The conditions can be any Perl expression. See the list of operators in
41489bc0 316the next section for information on comparison and boolean logic operators,
bfe16a1a 317which are commonly used in conditional statements.
318
319=over 4
320
321=item if
322
323 if ( condition ) {
324 ...
325 } elsif ( other condition ) {
326 ...
327 } else {
328 ...
329 }
330
331There's also a negated version of it:
332
333 unless ( condition ) {
334 ...
335 }
336
2cd1776c 337This is provided as a more readable version of C<if (!I<condition>)>.
bfe16a1a 338
339Note that the braces are required in Perl, even if you've only got one
340line in the block. However, there is a clever way of making your one-line
341conditional blocks more English like:
342
343 # the traditional way
344 if ($zippy) {
345 print "Yow!";
346 }
347
348 # the Perlish post-condition way
349 print "Yow!" if $zippy;
350 print "We have no bananas" unless $bananas;
351
352=item while
353
354 while ( condition ) {
355 ...
356 }
357
358There's also a negated version, for the same reason we have C<unless>:
359
360 until ( condition ) {
361 ...
362 }
363
364You can also use C<while> in a post-condition:
365
366 print "LA LA LA\n" while 1; # loops forever
367
368=item for
369
370Exactly like C:
371
d699aa5b 372 for ($i = 0; $i <= $max; $i++) {
bfe16a1a 373 ...
374 }
375
376The C style for loop is rarely needed in Perl since Perl provides
da75cd15 377the more friendly list scanning C<foreach> loop.
bfe16a1a 378
379=item foreach
380
381 foreach (@array) {
382 print "This element is $_\n";
383 }
384
3c678d22 385 print $list[$_] foreach 0 .. $max;
74375ba5 386
bfe16a1a 387 # you don't have to use the default $_ either...
388 foreach my $key (keys %hash) {
389 print "The value of $key is $hash{$key}\n";
390 }
391
392=back
393
394For more detail on looping constructs (and some that weren't mentioned in
395this overview) see L<perlsyn>.
396
397=head2 Builtin operators and functions
398
399Perl comes with a wide selection of builtin functions. Some of the ones
400we've already seen include C<print>, C<sort> and C<reverse>. A list of
41489bc0 401them is given at the start of L<perlfunc> and you can easily read
2cd1776c 402about any given function by using C<perldoc -f I<functionname>>.
bfe16a1a 403
404Perl operators are documented in full in L<perlop>, but here are a few
405of the most common ones:
406
407=over 4
408
409=item Arithmetic
410
411 + addition
412 - subtraction
413 * multiplication
414 / division
415
416=item Numeric comparison
417
418 == equality
419 != inequality
420 < less than
421 > greater than
422 <= less than or equal
423 >= greater than or equal
424
425=item String comparison
426
427 eq equality
428 ne inequality
429 lt less than
430 gt greater than
431 le less than or equal
432 ge greater than or equal
433
41489bc0 434(Why do we have separate numeric and string comparisons? Because we don't
435have special variable types, and Perl needs to know whether to sort
bfe16a1a 436numerically (where 99 is less than 100) or alphabetically (where 100 comes
437before 99).
438
439=item Boolean logic
440
441 && and
442 || or
443 ! not
444
41489bc0 445(C<and>, C<or> and C<not> aren't just in the above table as descriptions
ac036724 446of the operators. They're also supported as operators in their own
41489bc0 447right. They're more readable than the C-style operators, but have
448different precedence to C<&&> and friends. Check L<perlop> for more
bfe16a1a 449detail.)
450
451=item Miscellaneous
452
453 = assignment
454 . string concatenation
455 x string multiplication
456 .. range operator (creates a list of numbers)
457
458=back
459
460Many operators can be combined with a C<=> as follows:
461
462 $a += 1; # same as $a = $a + 1
463 $a -= 1; # same as $a = $a - 1
464 $a .= "\n"; # same as $a = $a . "\n";
465
466=head2 Files and I/O
467
468You can open a file for input or output using the C<open()> function.
41489bc0 469It's documented in extravagant detail in L<perlfunc> and L<perlopentut>,
bfe16a1a 470but in short:
471
74375ba5 472 open(my $in, "<", "input.txt") or die "Can't open input.txt: $!";
473 open(my $out, ">", "output.txt") or die "Can't open output.txt: $!";
474 open(my $log, ">>", "my.log") or die "Can't open my.log: $!";
bfe16a1a 475
476You can read from an open filehandle using the C<< <> >> operator. In
477scalar context it reads a single line from the filehandle, and in list
478context it reads the whole file in, assigning each line to an element of
479the list:
480
74375ba5 481 my $line = <$in>;
482 my @lines = <$in>;
bfe16a1a 483
484Reading in the whole file at one time is called slurping. It can
485be useful but it may be a memory hog. Most text file processing
486can be done a line at a time with Perl's looping constructs.
487
488The C<< <> >> operator is most often seen in a C<while> loop:
489
41489bc0 490 while (<$in>) { # assigns each line in turn to $_
bfe16a1a 491 print "Just read in this line: $_";
492 }
493
494We've already seen how to print to standard output using C<print()>.
495However, C<print()> can also take an optional first argument specifying
496which filehandle to print to:
497
498 print STDERR "This is your final warning.\n";
74375ba5 499 print $out $record;
500 print $log $logmessage;
bfe16a1a 501
502When you're done with your filehandles, you should C<close()> them
503(though to be honest, Perl will clean up after you if you forget):
504
74375ba5 505 close $in or die "$in: $!";
bfe16a1a 506
507=head2 Regular expressions
508
509Perl's regular expression support is both broad and deep, and is the
510subject of lengthy documentation in L<perlrequick>, L<perlretut>, and
511elsewhere. However, in short:
512
513=over 4
514
515=item Simple matching
516
517 if (/foo/) { ... } # true if $_ contains "foo"
518 if ($a =~ /foo/) { ... } # true if $a contains "foo"
519
520The C<//> matching operator is documented in L<perlop>. It operates on
521C<$_> by default, or can be bound to another variable using the C<=~>
522binding operator (also documented in L<perlop>).
523
524=item Simple substitution
525
526 s/foo/bar/; # replaces foo with bar in $_
527 $a =~ s/foo/bar/; # replaces foo with bar in $a
528 $a =~ s/foo/bar/g; # replaces ALL INSTANCES of foo with bar in $a
529
530The C<s///> substitution operator is documented in L<perlop>.
531
532=item More complex regular expressions
533
534You don't just have to match on fixed strings. In fact, you can match
535on just about anything you could dream of by using more complex regular
536expressions. These are documented at great length in L<perlre>, but for
537the meantime, here's a quick cheat sheet:
538
539 . a single character
d699aa5b 540 \s a whitespace character (space, tab, newline, ...)
bfe16a1a 541 \S non-whitespace character
542 \d a digit (0-9)
543 \D a non-digit
544 \w a word character (a-z, A-Z, 0-9, _)
545 \W a non-word character
546 [aeiou] matches a single character in the given set
547 [^aeiou] matches a single character outside the given set
548 (foo|bar|baz) matches any of the alternatives specified
549
550 ^ start of string
551 $ end of string
552
41489bc0 553Quantifiers can be used to specify how many of the previous thing you
554want to match on, where "thing" means either a literal character, one
555of the metacharacters listed above, or a group of characters or
bfe16a1a 556metacharacters in parentheses.
557
558 * zero or more of the previous thing
559 + one or more of the previous thing
560 ? zero or one of the previous thing
561 {3} matches exactly 3 of the previous thing
562 {3,6} matches between 3 and 6 of the previous thing
563 {3,} matches 3 or more of the previous thing
564
565Some brief examples:
566
567 /^\d+/ string starts with one or more digits
568 /^$/ nothing in the string (start and end are adjacent)
41489bc0 569 /(\d\s){3}/ a three digits, each followed by a whitespace
bfe16a1a 570 character (eg "3 4 5 ")
41489bc0 571 /(a.)+/ matches a string in which every odd-numbered letter
bfe16a1a 572 is a (eg "abacadaf")
573
574 # This loop reads from STDIN, and prints non-blank lines:
575 while (<>) {
576 next if /^$/;
577 print;
578 }
579
580=item Parentheses for capturing
581
41489bc0 582As well as grouping, parentheses serve a second purpose. They can be
bfe16a1a 583used to capture the results of parts of the regexp match for later use.
584The results end up in C<$1>, C<$2> and so on.
585
586 # a cheap and nasty way to break an email address up into parts
587
59ca07c7 588 if ($email =~ /([^@]+)@(.+)/) {
bfe16a1a 589 print "Username is $1\n";
590 print "Hostname is $2\n";
591 }
592
593=item Other regexp features
594
595Perl regexps also support backreferences, lookaheads, and all kinds of
596other complex details. Read all about them in L<perlrequick>,
597L<perlretut>, and L<perlre>.
598
599=back
600
601=head2 Writing subroutines
602
603Writing subroutines is easy:
604
74375ba5 605 sub logger {
bfe16a1a 606 my $logmessage = shift;
74375ba5 607 open my $logfile, ">>", "my.log" or die "Could not open my.log: $!";
608 print $logfile $logmessage;
bfe16a1a 609 }
610
74375ba5 611Now we can use the subroutine just as any other built-in function:
612
613 logger("We have a logger subroutine!");
614
bfe16a1a 615What's that C<shift>? Well, the arguments to a subroutine are available
616to us as a special array called C<@_> (see L<perlvar> for more on that).
617The default argument to the C<shift> function just happens to be C<@_>.
618So C<my $logmessage = shift;> shifts the first item off the list of
41489bc0 619arguments and assigns it to C<$logmessage>.
bfe16a1a 620
621We can manipulate C<@_> in other ways too:
622
623 my ($logmessage, $priority) = @_; # common
624 my $logmessage = $_[0]; # uncommon, and ugly
625
626Subroutines can also return values:
627
628 sub square {
629 my $num = shift;
630 my $result = $num * $num;
631 return $result;
632 }
633
74375ba5 634Then use it like:
635
636 $sq = square(8);
637
bfe16a1a 638For more information on writing subroutines, see L<perlsub>.
639
640=head2 OO Perl
641
642OO Perl is relatively simple and is implemented using references which
643know what sort of object they are based on Perl's concept of packages.
41489bc0 644However, OO Perl is largely beyond the scope of this document.
bfe16a1a 645Read L<perlboot>, L<perltoot>, L<perltooc> and L<perlobj>.
646
647As a beginning Perl programmer, your most common use of OO Perl will be
648in using third-party modules, which are documented below.
649
650=head2 Using Perl modules
651
652Perl modules provide a range of features to help you avoid reinventing
f224927c 653the wheel, and can be downloaded from CPAN ( http://www.cpan.org/ ). A
bfe16a1a 654number of popular modules are included with the Perl distribution
655itself.
656
657Categories of modules range from text manipulation to network protocols
658to database integration to graphics. A categorized list of modules is
659also available from CPAN.
660
661To learn how to install modules you download from CPAN, read
514f8bac 662L<perlmodinstall>.
bfe16a1a 663
2cd1776c 664To learn how to use a particular module, use C<perldoc I<Module::Name>>.
665Typically you will want to C<use I<Module::Name>>, which will then give
666you access to exported functions or an OO interface to the module.
bfe16a1a 667
668L<perlfaq> contains questions and answers related to many common
669tasks, and often provides suggestions for good CPAN modules to use.
670
671L<perlmod> describes Perl modules in general. L<perlmodlib> lists the
672modules which came with your Perl installation.
673
674If you feel the urge to write Perl modules, L<perlnewmod> will give you
675good advice.
676
677=head1 AUTHOR
678
679Kirrily "Skud" Robert <skud@cpan.org>