Provided by: perl-doc_5.22.1-9ubuntu0.9_all 

NAME
perldata - Perl data types
DESCRIPTION
Variable names
Perl has three built-in data types: scalars, arrays of scalars, and associative arrays of scalars, known
as "hashes". A scalar is a single string (of any size, limited only by the available memory), number, or
a reference to something (which will be discussed in perlref). Normal arrays are ordered lists of
scalars indexed by number, starting with 0. Hashes are unordered collections of scalar values indexed by
their associated string key.
Values are usually referred to by name, or through a named reference. The first character of the name
tells you to what sort of data structure it refers. The rest of the name tells you the particular value
to which it refers. Usually this name is a single identifier, that is, a string beginning with a letter
or underscore, and containing letters, underscores, and digits. In some cases, it may be a chain of
identifiers, separated by "::" (or by the slightly archaic "'"); all but the last are interpreted as
names of packages, to locate the namespace in which to look up the final identifier (see "Packages" in
perlmod for details). For a more in-depth discussion on identifiers, see "Identifier parsing". It's
possible to substitute for a simple identifier, an expression that produces a reference to the value at
runtime. This is described in more detail below and in perlref.
Perl also has its own built-in variables whose names don't follow these rules. They have strange names
so they don't accidentally collide with one of your normal variables. Strings that match parenthesized
parts of a regular expression are saved under names containing only digits after the "$" (see perlop and
perlre). In addition, several special variables that provide windows into the inner working of Perl have
names containing punctuation characters and control characters. These are documented in perlvar.
Scalar values are always named with '$', even when referring to a scalar that is part of an array or a
hash. The '$' symbol works semantically like the English word "the" in that it indicates a single value
is expected.
$days # the simple scalar value "days"
$days[28] # the 29th element of array @days
$days{'Feb'} # the 'Feb' value from hash %days
$#days # the last index of array @days
Entire arrays (and slices of arrays and hashes) are denoted by '@', which works much as the word "these"
or "those" does in English, in that it indicates multiple values are expected.
@days # ($days[0], $days[1],... $days[n])
@days[3,4,5] # same as ($days[3],$days[4],$days[5])
@days{'a','c'} # same as ($days{'a'},$days{'c'})
Entire hashes are denoted by '%':
%days # (key1, val1, key2, val2 ...)
In addition, subroutines are named with an initial '&', though this is optional when unambiguous, just as
the word "do" is often redundant in English. Symbol table entries can be named with an initial '*', but
you don't really care about that yet (if ever :-).
Every variable type has its own namespace, as do several non-variable identifiers. This means that you
can, without fear of conflict, use the same name for a scalar variable, an array, or a hash--or, for that
matter, for a filehandle, a directory handle, a subroutine name, a format name, or a label. This means
that $foo and @foo are two different variables. It also means that $foo[1] is a part of @foo, not a part
of $foo. This may seem a bit weird, but that's okay, because it is weird.
Because variable references always start with '$', '@', or '%', the "reserved" words aren't in fact
reserved with respect to variable names. They are reserved with respect to labels and filehandles,
however, which don't have an initial special character. You can't have a filehandle named "log", for
instance. Hint: you could say "open(LOG,'logfile')" rather than "open(log,'logfile')". Using uppercase
filehandles also improves readability and protects you from conflict with future reserved words. Case is
significant--"FOO", "Foo", and "foo" are all different names. Names that start with a letter or
underscore may also contain digits and underscores.
It is possible to replace such an alphanumeric name with an expression that returns a reference to the
appropriate type. For a description of this, see perlref.
Names that start with a digit may contain only more digits. Names that do not start with a letter,
underscore, digit or a caret (i.e. a control character) are limited to one character, e.g., $% or $$.
(Most of these one character names have a predefined significance to Perl. For instance, $$ is the
current process id.)
Identifier parsing
Up until Perl 5.18, the actual rules of what a valid identifier was were a bit fuzzy. However, in
general, anything defined here should work on previous versions of Perl, while the opposite -- edge cases
that work in previous versions, but aren't defined here -- probably won't work on newer versions. As an
important side note, please note that the following only applies to bareword identifiers as found in Perl
source code, not identifiers introduced through symbolic references, which have much fewer restrictions.
If working under the effect of the "use utf8;" pragma, the following rules apply:
/ (?[ ( \p{Word} & \p{XID_Start} ) + [_] ])
(?[ ( \p{Word} & \p{XID_Continue} ) ]) * /x
That is, a "start" character followed by any number of "continue" characters. Perl requires every
character in an identifier to also match "\w" (this prevents some problematic cases); and Perl
additionally accepts identfier names beginning with an underscore.
If not under "use utf8", the source is treated as ASCII + 128 extra controls, and identifiers should
match
/ (?aa) (?!\d) \w+ /x
That is, any word character in the ASCII range, as long as the first character is not a digit.
There are two package separators in Perl: A double colon ("::") and a single quote ("'"). Normal
identifiers can start or end with a double colon, and can contain several parts delimited by double
colons. Single quotes have similar rules, but with the exception that they are not legal at the end of
an identifier: That is, "$'foo" and "$foo'bar" are legal, but "$foo'bar'" is not.
Additionally, if the identifier is preceded by a sigil -- that is, if the identifier is part of a
variable name -- it may optionally be enclosed in braces.
While you can mix double colons with singles quotes, the quotes must come after the colons: "$::::'foo"
and "$foo::'bar" are legal, but "$::'::foo" and "$foo'::bar" are not.
Put together, a grammar to match a basic identifier becomes
/
(?(DEFINE)
(?<variable>
(?&sigil)
(?:
(?&normal_identifier)
| \{ \s* (?&normal_identifier) \s* \}
)
)
(?<normal_identifier>
(?: :: )* '?
(?&basic_identifier)
(?: (?= (?: :: )+ '? | (?: :: )* ' ) (?&normal_identifier) )?
(?: :: )*
)
(?<basic_identifier>
# is use utf8 on?
(?(?{ (caller(0))[8] & $utf8::hint_bits })
(?&Perl_XIDS) (?&Perl_XIDC)*
| (?aa) (?!\d) \w+
)
)
(?<sigil> [&*\$\@\%])
(?<Perl_XIDS> (?[ ( \p{Word} & \p{XID_Start} ) + [_] ]) )
(?<Perl_XIDC> (?[ \p{Word} & \p{XID_Continue} ]) )
)
/x
Meanwhile, special identifiers don't follow the above rules; For the most part, all of the identifiers in
this category have a special meaning given by Perl. Because they have special parsing rules, these
generally can't be fully-qualified. They come in four forms:
• A sigil, followed solely by digits matching "\p{POSIX_Digit}", like $0, $1, or $10000.
• A sigil, followed by a caret and any one of the characters "[][A-Z^_?\]", like $^V or $^], or a sigil
followed by a literal non-space, non-"NUL" control character matching the "\p{POSIX_Cntrl}" property.
Due to a historical oddity, if not running under "use utf8", the 128 characters in the "[0x80-0xff]"
range are considered to be controls, and may also be used in length-one variables. However, the use
of non-graphical characters is deprecated as of v5.22, and support for them will be removed in a
future version of perl. ASCII space characters and "NUL" already aren't allowed, so this means that
a single-character variable name with that name being any other C0 control "[0x01-0x1F]", or "DEL"
will generate a deprecated warning. Already, under "use utf8", non-ASCII characters must match
"Perl_XIDS". As of v5.22, when not under "use utf8" C1 controls "[0x80-0x9F]", NO BREAK SPACE, and
SOFT HYPHEN ("SHY")) generate a deprecated warning.
• Similar to the above, a sigil, followed by bareword text in braces, where the first character is
either a caret followed by any one of the characters "[][A-Z^_?\]", like "${^GLOBAL_PHASE}", or a
non-"NUL", non-space literal control like "${\7LOBAL_PHASE}". Like the above, when not under "use
utf8", the characters in "[0x80-0xFF]" are considered controls, but as of v5.22, the use of any that
are non-graphical are deprecated, and as of v5.20 the use of any ASCII-range literal control is
deprecated. Support for these will be removed in a future version of perl.
• A sigil followed by a single character matching the "\p{POSIX_Punct}" property, like $! or "%+",
except the character "{" doesn't work.
Note that as of Perl 5.20, literal control characters in variable names are deprecated; and as of Perl
5.22, any other non-graphic characters are also deprecated.
Context
The interpretation of operations and values in Perl sometimes depends on the requirements of the context
around the operation or value. There are two major contexts: list and scalar. Certain operations return
list values in contexts wanting a list, and scalar values otherwise. If this is true of an operation it
will be mentioned in the documentation for that operation. In other words, Perl overloads certain
operations based on whether the expected return value is singular or plural. Some words in English work
this way, like "fish" and "sheep".
In a reciprocal fashion, an operation provides either a scalar or a list context to each of its
arguments. For example, if you say
int( <STDIN> )
the integer operation provides scalar context for the <> operator, which responds by reading one line
from STDIN and passing it back to the integer operation, which will then find the integer value of that
line and return that. If, on the other hand, you say
sort( <STDIN> )
then the sort operation provides list context for <>, which will proceed to read every line available up
to the end of file, and pass that list of lines back to the sort routine, which will then sort those
lines and return them as a list to whatever the context of the sort was.
Assignment is a little bit special in that it uses its left argument to determine the context for the
right argument. Assignment to a scalar evaluates the right-hand side in scalar context, while assignment
to an array or hash evaluates the righthand side in list context. Assignment to a list (or slice, which
is just a list anyway) also evaluates the right-hand side in list context.
When you use the "use warnings" pragma or Perl's -w command-line option, you may see warnings about
useless uses of constants or functions in "void context". Void context just means the value has been
discarded, such as a statement containing only ""fred";" or "getpwuid(0);". It still counts as scalar
context for functions that care whether or not they're being called in list context.
User-defined subroutines may choose to care whether they are being called in a void, scalar, or list
context. Most subroutines do not need to bother, though. That's because both scalars and lists are
automatically interpolated into lists. See "wantarray" in perlfunc for how you would dynamically discern
your function's calling context.
Scalar values
All data in Perl is a scalar, an array of scalars, or a hash of scalars. A scalar may contain one single
value in any of three different flavors: a number, a string, or a reference. In general, conversion from
one form to another is transparent. Although a scalar may not directly hold multiple values, it may
contain a reference to an array or hash which in turn contains multiple values.
Scalars aren't necessarily one thing or another. There's no place to declare a scalar variable to be of
type "string", type "number", type "reference", or anything else. Because of the automatic conversion of
scalars, operations that return scalars don't need to care (and in fact, cannot care) whether their
caller is looking for a string, a number, or a reference. Perl is a contextually polymorphic language
whose scalars can be strings, numbers, or references (which includes objects). Although strings and
numbers are considered pretty much the same thing for nearly all purposes, references are strongly-typed,
uncastable pointers with builtin reference-counting and destructor invocation.
A scalar value is interpreted as FALSE in the Boolean sense if it is undefined, the null string or the
number 0 (or its string equivalent, "0"), and TRUE if it is anything else. The Boolean context is just a
special kind of scalar context where no conversion to a string or a number is ever performed.
There are actually two varieties of null strings (sometimes referred to as "empty" strings), a defined
one and an undefined one. The defined version is just a string of length zero, such as "". The
undefined version is the value that indicates that there is no real value for something, such as when
there was an error, or at end of file, or when you refer to an uninitialized variable or element of an
array or hash. Although in early versions of Perl, an undefined scalar could become defined when first
used in a place expecting a defined value, this no longer happens except for rare cases of
autovivification as explained in perlref. You can use the defined() operator to determine whether a
scalar value is defined (this has no meaning on arrays or hashes), and the undef() operator to produce an
undefined value.
To find out whether a given string is a valid non-zero number, it's sometimes enough to test it against
both numeric 0 and also lexical "0" (although this will cause noises if warnings are on). That's because
strings that aren't numbers count as 0, just as they do in awk:
if ($str == 0 && $str ne "0") {
warn "That doesn't look like a number";
}
That method may be best because otherwise you won't treat IEEE notations like "NaN" or "Infinity"
properly. At other times, you might prefer to determine whether string data can be used numerically by
calling the POSIX::strtod() function or by inspecting your string with a regular expression (as
documented in perlre).
warn "has nondigits" if /\D/;
warn "not a natural number" unless /^\d+$/; # rejects -3
warn "not an integer" unless /^-?\d+$/; # rejects +3
warn "not an integer" unless /^[+-]?\d+$/;
warn "not a decimal number" unless /^-?\d+\.?\d*$/; # rejects .2
warn "not a decimal number" unless /^-?(?:\d+(?:\.\d*)?|\.\d+)$/;
warn "not a C float"
unless /^([+-]?)(?=\d|\.\d)\d*(\.\d*)?([Ee]([+-]?\d+))?$/;
The length of an array is a scalar value. You may find the length of array @days by evaluating $#days,
as in csh. However, this isn't the length of the array; it's the subscript of the last element, which is
a different value since there is ordinarily a 0th element. Assigning to $#days actually changes the
length of the array. Shortening an array this way destroys intervening values. Lengthening an array
that was previously shortened does not recover values that were in those elements.
You can also gain some minuscule measure of efficiency by pre-extending an array that is going to get
big. You can also extend an array by assigning to an element that is off the end of the array. You can
truncate an array down to nothing by assigning the null list () to it. The following are equivalent:
@whatever = ();
$#whatever = -1;
If you evaluate an array in scalar context, it returns the length of the array. (Note that this is not
true of lists, which return the last value, like the C comma operator, nor of built-in functions, which
return whatever they feel like returning.) The following is always true:
scalar(@whatever) == $#whatever + 1;
Some programmers choose to use an explicit conversion so as to leave nothing to doubt:
$element_count = scalar(@whatever);
If you evaluate a hash in scalar context, it returns false if the hash is empty. If there are any
key/value pairs, it returns true; more precisely, the value returned is a string consisting of the number
of used buckets and the number of allocated buckets, separated by a slash. This is pretty much useful
only to find out whether Perl's internal hashing algorithm is performing poorly on your data set. For
example, you stick 10,000 things in a hash, but evaluating %HASH in scalar context reveals "1/16", which
means only one out of sixteen buckets has been touched, and presumably contains all 10,000 of your items.
This isn't supposed to happen. If a tied hash is evaluated in scalar context, the "SCALAR" method is
called (with a fallback to "FIRSTKEY").
You can preallocate space for a hash by assigning to the keys() function. This rounds up the allocated
buckets to the next power of two:
keys(%users) = 1000; # allocate 1024 buckets
Scalar value constructors
Numeric literals are specified in any of the following floating point or integer formats:
12345
12345.67
.23E-10 # a very small number
3.14_15_92 # a very important number
4_294_967_296 # underscore for legibility
0xff # hex
0xdead_beef # more hex
0377 # octal (only numbers, begins with 0)
0b011011 # binary
0x1.999ap-4 # hexadecimal floating point (the 'p' is required)
You are allowed to use underscores (underbars) in numeric literals between digits for legibility (but not
multiple underscores in a row: "23__500" is not legal; "23_500" is). You could, for example, group
binary digits by threes (as for a Unix-style mode argument such as 0b110_100_100) or by fours (to
represent nibbles, as in 0b1010_0110) or in other groups.
String literals are usually delimited by either single or double quotes. They work much like quotes in
the standard Unix shells: double-quoted string literals are subject to backslash and variable
substitution; single-quoted strings are not (except for "\'" and "\\"). The usual C-style backslash
rules apply for making characters such as newline, tab, etc., as well as some more exotic forms. See
"Quote and Quote-like Operators" in perlop for a list.
Hexadecimal, octal, or binary, representations in string literals (e.g. '0xff') are not automatically
converted to their integer representation. The hex() and oct() functions make these conversions for you.
See "hex" in perlfunc and "oct" in perlfunc for more details.
Hexadecimal floating point can start just like a hexadecimal literal, and it can be followed by an
optional fractional hexadecimal part, but it must be followed by "p", an optional sign, and a power of
two. The format is useful for accurately presenting floating point values, avoiding conversions to or
from decimal floating point, and therefore avoiding possible loss in precision. Notice that while most
current platforms use the 64-bit IEEE 754 floating point, not all do. Another potential source of (low-
order) differences are the floating point rounding modes, which can differ between CPUs, operating
systems, and compilers, and which Perl doesn't control.
You can also embed newlines directly in your strings, i.e., they can end on a different line than they
begin. This is nice, but if you forget your trailing quote, the error will not be reported until Perl
finds another line containing the quote character, which may be much further on in the script. Variable
substitution inside strings is limited to scalar variables, arrays, and array or hash slices. (In other
words, names beginning with $ or @, followed by an optional bracketed expression as a subscript.) The
following code segment prints out "The price is $100."
$Price = '$100'; # not interpolated
print "The price is $Price.\n"; # interpolated
There is no double interpolation in Perl, so the $100 is left as is.
By default floating point numbers substituted inside strings use the dot (".") as the decimal separator.
If "use locale" is in effect, and POSIX::setlocale() has been called, the character used for the decimal
separator is affected by the LC_NUMERIC locale. See perllocale and POSIX.
As in some shells, you can enclose the variable name in braces to disambiguate it from following
alphanumerics (and underscores). You must also do this when interpolating a variable into a string to
separate the variable name from a following double-colon or an apostrophe, since these would be otherwise
treated as a package separator:
$who = "Larry";
print PASSWD "${who}::0:0:Superuser:/:/bin/perl\n";
print "We use ${who}speak when ${who}'s here.\n";
Without the braces, Perl would have looked for a $whospeak, a $who::0, and a "$who's" variable. The last
two would be the $0 and the $s variables in the (presumably) non-existent package "who".
In fact, a simple identifier within such curlies is forced to be a string, and likewise within a hash
subscript. Neither need quoting. Our earlier example, $days{'Feb'} can be written as $days{Feb} and the
quotes will be assumed automatically. But anything more complicated in the subscript will be interpreted
as an expression. This means for example that "$version{2.0}++" is equivalent to "$version{2}++", not to
"$version{'2.0'}++".
Special floating point: infinity (Inf) and not-a-number (NaN)
Floating point values include the special values "Inf" and "NaN", for infinity and not-a-number. The
infinity can be also negative.
The infinity is the result of certain math operations that overflow the floating point range, like
9**9**9. The not-a-number is the result when the result is undefined or unrepresentable. Though note
that you cannot get "NaN" from some common "undefined" or "out-of-range" operations like dividing by
zero, or square root of a negative number, since Perl generates fatal errors for those.
The infinity and not-a-number have their own special arithmetic rules. The general rule is that they are
"contagious": "Inf" plus one is "Inf", and "NaN" plus one is "NaN". Where things get interesting is when
you combine infinities and not-a-numbers: "Inf" minus "Inf" and "Inf" divided by "INf" are "NaN" (while
"Inf" plus "Inf" is "Inf" and "Inf" times "Inf" is "Inf"). "NaN" is also curious in that it does not
equal any number, including itself: "NaN" != "NaN".
Perl doesn't understand "Inf" and "NaN" as numeric literals, but you can have them as strings, and Perl
will convert them as needed: "Inf" + 1. (You can, however, import them from the POSIX extension; "use
POSIX qw(Inf NaN);" and then use them as literals.)
Note that on input (string to number) Perl accepts "Inf" and "NaN" in many forms. Case is ignored, and
the Win32-specific forms like "1.#INF" are understood, but on output the values are normalized to "Inf"
and "NaN".
Version Strings
A literal of the form "v1.20.300.4000" is parsed as a string composed of characters with the specified
ordinals. This form, known as v-strings, provides an alternative, more readable way to construct
strings, rather than use the somewhat less readable interpolation form "\x{1}\x{14}\x{12c}\x{fa0}". This
is useful for representing Unicode strings, and for comparing version "numbers" using the string
comparison operators, "cmp", "gt", "lt" etc. If there are two or more dots in the literal, the leading
"v" may be omitted.
print v9786; # prints SMILEY, "\x{263a}"
print v102.111.111; # prints "foo"
print 102.111.111; # same
Such literals are accepted by both "require" and "use" for doing a version check. Note that using the
v-strings for IPv4 addresses is not portable unless you also use the inet_aton()/inet_ntoa() routines of
the Socket package.
Note that since Perl 5.8.1 the single-number v-strings (like "v65") are not v-strings before the "=>"
operator (which is usually used to separate a hash key from a hash value); instead they are interpreted
as literal strings ('v65'). They were v-strings from Perl 5.6.0 to Perl 5.8.0, but that caused more
confusion and breakage than good. Multi-number v-strings like "v65.66" and 65.66.67 continue to be
v-strings always.
Special Literals
The special literals __FILE__, __LINE__, and __PACKAGE__ represent the current filename, line number, and
package name at that point in your program. __SUB__ gives a reference to the current subroutine. They
may be used only as separate tokens; they will not be interpolated into strings. If there is no current
package (due to an empty "package;" directive), __PACKAGE__ is the undefined value. (But the empty
"package;" is no longer supported, as of version 5.10.) Outside of a subroutine, __SUB__ is the
undefined value. __SUB__ is only available in 5.16 or higher, and only with a "use v5.16" or "use
feature "current_sub"" declaration.
The two control characters ^D and ^Z, and the tokens __END__ and __DATA__ may be used to indicate the
logical end of the script before the actual end of file. Any following text is ignored.
Text after __DATA__ may be read via the filehandle "PACKNAME::DATA", where "PACKNAME" is the package that
was current when the __DATA__ token was encountered. The filehandle is left open pointing to the line
after __DATA__. The program should "close DATA" when it is done reading from it. (Leaving it open leaks
filehandles if the module is reloaded for any reason, so it's a safer practice to close it.) For
compatibility with older scripts written before __DATA__ was introduced, __END__ behaves like __DATA__ in
the top level script (but not in files loaded with "require" or "do") and leaves the remaining contents
of the file accessible via "main::DATA".
See SelfLoader for more description of __DATA__, and an example of its use. Note that you cannot read
from the DATA filehandle in a BEGIN block: the BEGIN block is executed as soon as it is seen (during
compilation), at which point the corresponding __DATA__ (or __END__) token has not yet been seen.
Barewords
A word that has no other interpretation in the grammar will be treated as if it were a quoted string.
These are known as "barewords". As with filehandles and labels, a bareword that consists entirely of
lowercase letters risks conflict with future reserved words, and if you use the "use warnings" pragma or
the -w switch, Perl will warn you about any such words. Perl limits barewords (like identifiers) to
about 250 characters. Future versions of Perl are likely to eliminate these arbitrary limitations.
Some people may wish to outlaw barewords entirely. If you say
use strict 'subs';
then any bareword that would NOT be interpreted as a subroutine call produces a compile-time error
instead. The restriction lasts to the end of the enclosing block. An inner block may countermand this
by saying "no strict 'subs'".
Array Interpolation
Arrays and slices are interpolated into double-quoted strings by joining the elements with the delimiter
specified in the $" variable ($LIST_SEPARATOR if "use English;" is specified), space by default. The
following are equivalent:
$temp = join($", @ARGV);
system "echo $temp";
system "echo @ARGV";
Within search patterns (which also undergo double-quotish substitution) there is an unfortunate
ambiguity: Is "/$foo[bar]/" to be interpreted as "/${foo}[bar]/" (where "[bar]" is a character class for
the regular expression) or as "/${foo[bar]}/" (where "[bar]" is the subscript to array @foo)? If @foo
doesn't otherwise exist, then it's obviously a character class. If @foo exists, Perl takes a good guess
about "[bar]", and is almost always right. If it does guess wrong, or if you're just plain paranoid, you
can force the correct interpretation with curly braces as above.
If you're looking for the information on how to use here-documents, which used to be here, that's been
moved to "Quote and Quote-like Operators" in perlop.
List value constructors
List values are denoted by separating individual values by commas (and enclosing the list in parentheses
where precedence requires it):
(LIST)
In a context not requiring a list value, the value of what appears to be a list literal is simply the
value of the final element, as with the C comma operator. For example,
@foo = ('cc', '-E', $bar);
assigns the entire list value to array @foo, but
$foo = ('cc', '-E', $bar);
assigns the value of variable $bar to the scalar variable $foo. Note that the value of an actual array
in scalar context is the length of the array; the following assigns the value 3 to $foo:
@foo = ('cc', '-E', $bar);
$foo = @foo; # $foo gets 3
You may have an optional comma before the closing parenthesis of a list literal, so that you can say:
@foo = (
1,
2,
3,
);
To use a here-document to assign an array, one line per element, you might use an approach like this:
@sauces = <<End_Lines =~ m/(\S.*\S)/g;
normal tomato
spicy tomato
green chile
pesto
white wine
End_Lines
LISTs do automatic interpolation of sublists. That is, when a LIST is evaluated, each element of the
list is evaluated in list context, and the resulting list value is interpolated into LIST just as if each
individual element were a member of LIST. Thus arrays and hashes lose their identity in a LIST--the list
(@foo,@bar,&SomeSub,%glarch)
contains all the elements of @foo followed by all the elements of @bar, followed by all the elements
returned by the subroutine named SomeSub called in list context, followed by the key/value pairs of
%glarch. To make a list reference that does NOT interpolate, see perlref.
The null list is represented by (). Interpolating it in a list has no effect. Thus ((),(),()) is
equivalent to (). Similarly, interpolating an array with no elements is the same as if no array had been
interpolated at that point.
This interpolation combines with the facts that the opening and closing parentheses are optional (except
when necessary for precedence) and lists may end with an optional comma to mean that multiple commas
within lists are legal syntax. The list "1,,3" is a concatenation of two lists, "1," and 3, the first of
which ends with that optional comma. "1,,3" is "(1,),(3)" is "1,3" (And similarly for "1,,,3" is
"(1,),(,),3" is "1,3" and so on.) Not that we'd advise you to use this obfuscation.
A list value may also be subscripted like a normal array. You must put the list in parentheses to avoid
ambiguity. For example:
# Stat returns list value.
$time = (stat($file))[8];
# SYNTAX ERROR HERE.
$time = stat($file)[8]; # OOPS, FORGOT PARENTHESES
# Find a hex digit.
$hexdigit = ('a','b','c','d','e','f')[$digit-10];
# A "reverse comma operator".
return (pop(@foo),pop(@foo))[0];
Lists may be assigned to only when each element of the list is itself legal to assign to:
($a, $b, $c) = (1, 2, 3);
($map{'red'}, $map{'blue'}, $map{'green'}) = (0x00f, 0x0f0, 0xf00);
An exception to this is that you may assign to "undef" in a list. This is useful for throwing away some
of the return values of a function:
($dev, $ino, undef, undef, $uid, $gid) = stat($file);
As of Perl 5.22, you can also use "(undef)x2" instead of "undef, undef". (You can also do "($x) x 2",
which is less useful, because it assigns to the same variable twice, clobbering the first value
assigned.)
List assignment in scalar context returns the number of elements produced by the expression on the right
side of the assignment:
$x = (($foo,$bar) = (3,2,1)); # set $x to 3, not 2
$x = (($foo,$bar) = f()); # set $x to f()'s return count
This is handy when you want to do a list assignment in a Boolean context, because most list functions
return a null list when finished, which when assigned produces a 0, which is interpreted as FALSE.
It's also the source of a useful idiom for executing a function or performing an operation in list
context and then counting the number of return values, by assigning to an empty list and then using that
assignment in scalar context. For example, this code:
$count = () = $string =~ /\d+/g;
will place into $count the number of digit groups found in $string. This happens because the pattern
match is in list context (since it is being assigned to the empty list), and will therefore return a list
of all matching parts of the string. The list assignment in scalar context will translate that into the
number of elements (here, the number of times the pattern matched) and assign that to $count. Note that
simply using
$count = $string =~ /\d+/g;
would not have worked, since a pattern match in scalar context will only return true or false, rather
than a count of matches.
The final element of a list assignment may be an array or a hash:
($a, $b, @rest) = split;
my($a, $b, %rest) = @_;
You can actually put an array or hash anywhere in the list, but the first one in the list will soak up
all the values, and anything after it will become undefined. This may be useful in a my() or local().
A hash can be initialized using a literal list holding pairs of items to be interpreted as a key and a
value:
# same as map assignment above
%map = ('red',0x00f,'blue',0x0f0,'green',0xf00);
While literal lists and named arrays are often interchangeable, that's not the case for hashes. Just
because you can subscript a list value like a normal array does not mean that you can subscript a list
value as a hash. Likewise, hashes included as parts of other lists (including parameters lists and
return lists from functions) always flatten out into key/value pairs. That's why it's good to use
references sometimes.
It is often more readable to use the "=>" operator between key/value pairs. The "=>" operator is mostly
just a more visually distinctive synonym for a comma, but it also arranges for its left-hand operand to
be interpreted as a string if it's a bareword that would be a legal simple identifier. "=>" doesn't
quote compound identifiers, that contain double colons. This makes it nice for initializing hashes:
%map = (
red => 0x00f,
blue => 0x0f0,
green => 0xf00,
);
or for initializing hash references to be used as records:
$rec = {
witch => 'Mable the Merciless',
cat => 'Fluffy the Ferocious',
date => '10/31/1776',
};
or for using call-by-named-parameter to complicated functions:
$field = $query->radio_group(
name => 'group_name',
values => ['eenie','meenie','minie'],
default => 'meenie',
linebreak => 'true',
labels => \%labels
);
Note that just because a hash is initialized in that order doesn't mean that it comes out in that order.
See "sort" in perlfunc for examples of how to arrange for an output ordering.
If a key appears more than once in the initializer list of a hash, the last occurrence wins:
%circle = (
center => [5, 10],
center => [27, 9],
radius => 100,
color => [0xDF, 0xFF, 0x00],
radius => 54,
);
# same as
%circle = (
center => [27, 9],
color => [0xDF, 0xFF, 0x00],
radius => 54,
);
This can be used to provide overridable configuration defaults:
# values in %args take priority over %config_defaults
%config = (%config_defaults, %args);
Subscripts
An array can be accessed one scalar at a time by specifying a dollar sign ("$"), then the name of the
array (without the leading "@"), then the subscript inside square brackets. For example:
@myarray = (5, 50, 500, 5000);
print "The Third Element is", $myarray[2], "\n";
The array indices start with 0. A negative subscript retrieves its value from the end. In our example,
$myarray[-1] would have been 5000, and $myarray[-2] would have been 500.
Hash subscripts are similar, only instead of square brackets curly brackets are used. For example:
%scientists =
(
"Newton" => "Isaac",
"Einstein" => "Albert",
"Darwin" => "Charles",
"Feynman" => "Richard",
);
print "Darwin's First Name is ", $scientists{"Darwin"}, "\n";
You can also subscript a list to get a single element from it:
$dir = (getpwnam("daemon"))[7];
Multi-dimensional array emulation
Multidimensional arrays may be emulated by subscripting a hash with a list. The elements of the list are
joined with the subscript separator (see "$;" in perlvar).
$foo{$a,$b,$c}
is equivalent to
$foo{join($;, $a, $b, $c)}
The default subscript separator is "\034", the same as SUBSEP in awk.
Slices
A slice accesses several elements of a list, an array, or a hash simultaneously using a list of
subscripts. It's more convenient than writing out the individual elements as a list of separate scalar
values.
($him, $her) = @folks[0,-1]; # array slice
@them = @folks[0 .. 3]; # array slice
($who, $home) = @ENV{"USER", "HOME"}; # hash slice
($uid, $dir) = (getpwnam("daemon"))[2,7]; # list slice
Since you can assign to a list of variables, you can also assign to an array or hash slice.
@days[3..5] = qw/Wed Thu Fri/;
@colors{'red','blue','green'}
= (0xff0000, 0x0000ff, 0x00ff00);
@folks[0, -1] = @folks[-1, 0];
The previous assignments are exactly equivalent to
($days[3], $days[4], $days[5]) = qw/Wed Thu Fri/;
($colors{'red'}, $colors{'blue'}, $colors{'green'})
= (0xff0000, 0x0000ff, 0x00ff00);
($folks[0], $folks[-1]) = ($folks[-1], $folks[0]);
Since changing a slice changes the original array or hash that it's slicing, a "foreach" construct will
alter some--or even all--of the values of the array or hash.
foreach (@array[ 4 .. 10 ]) { s/peter/paul/ }
foreach (@hash{qw[key1 key2]}) {
s/^\s+//; # trim leading whitespace
s/\s+$//; # trim trailing whitespace
s/(\w+)/\u\L$1/g; # "titlecase" words
}
As a special exception, when you slice a list (but not an array or a hash), if the list evaluates to
empty, then taking a slice of that empty list will always yield the empty list in turn. Thus:
@a = ()[0,1]; # @a has no elements
@b = (@a)[0,1]; # @b has no elements
@c = (sub{}->())[0,1]; # @c has no elements
@d = ('a','b')[0,1]; # @d has two elements
@e = (@d)[0,1,8,9]; # @e has four elements
@f = (@d)[8,9]; # @f has two elements
This makes it easy to write loops that terminate when a null list is returned:
while ( ($home, $user) = (getpwent)[7,0] ) {
printf "%-8s %s\n", $user, $home;
}
As noted earlier in this document, the scalar sense of list assignment is the number of elements on the
right-hand side of the assignment. The null list contains no elements, so when the password file is
exhausted, the result is 0, not 2.
Slices in scalar context return the last item of the slice.
@a = qw/first second third/;
%h = (first => 'A', second => 'B');
$t = @a[0, 1]; # $t is now 'second'
$u = @h{'first', 'second'}; # $u is now 'B'
If you're confused about why you use an '@' there on a hash slice instead of a '%', think of it like
this. The type of bracket (square or curly) governs whether it's an array or a hash being looked at. On
the other hand, the leading symbol ('$' or '@') on the array or hash indicates whether you are getting
back a singular value (a scalar) or a plural one (a list).
Key/Value Hash Slices
Starting in Perl 5.20, a hash slice operation with the % symbol is a variant of slice operation returning
a list of key/value pairs rather than just values:
%h = (blonk => 2, foo => 3, squink => 5, bar => 8);
%subset = %h{'foo', 'bar'}; # key/value hash slice
# %subset is now (foo => 3, bar => 8)
However, the result of such a slice cannot be localized, deleted or used in assignment. These are
otherwise very much consistent with hash slices using the @ symbol.
Index/Value Array Slices
Similar to key/value hash slices (and also introduced in Perl 5.20), the % array slice syntax returns a
list of index/value pairs:
@a = "a".."z";
@list = %a[3,4,6];
# @list is now (3, "d", 4, "e", 6, "g")
Typeglobs and Filehandles
Perl uses an internal type called a typeglob to hold an entire symbol table entry. The type prefix of a
typeglob is a "*", because it represents all types. This used to be the preferred way to pass arrays and
hashes by reference into a function, but now that we have real references, this is seldom needed.
The main use of typeglobs in modern Perl is create symbol table aliases. This assignment:
*this = *that;
makes $this an alias for $that, @this an alias for @that, %this an alias for %that, &this an alias for
&that, etc. Much safer is to use a reference. This:
local *Here::blue = \$There::green;
temporarily makes $Here::blue an alias for $There::green, but doesn't make @Here::blue an alias for
@There::green, or %Here::blue an alias for %There::green, etc. See "Symbol Tables" in perlmod for more
examples of this. Strange though this may seem, this is the basis for the whole module import/export
system.
Another use for typeglobs is to pass filehandles into a function or to create new filehandles. If you
need to use a typeglob to save away a filehandle, do it this way:
$fh = *STDOUT;
or perhaps as a real reference, like this:
$fh = \*STDOUT;
See perlsub for examples of using these as indirect filehandles in functions.
Typeglobs are also a way to create a local filehandle using the local() operator. These last until their
block is exited, but may be passed back. For example:
sub newopen {
my $path = shift;
local *FH; # not my!
open (FH, $path) or return undef;
return *FH;
}
$fh = newopen('/etc/passwd');
Now that we have the *foo{THING} notation, typeglobs aren't used as much for filehandle manipulations,
although they're still needed to pass brand new file and directory handles into or out of functions.
That's because *HANDLE{IO} only works if HANDLE has already been used as a handle. In other words, *FH
must be used to create new symbol table entries; *foo{THING} cannot. When in doubt, use *FH.
All functions that are capable of creating filehandles (open(), opendir(), pipe(), socketpair(),
sysopen(), socket(), and accept()) automatically create an anonymous filehandle if the handle passed to
them is an uninitialized scalar variable. This allows the constructs such as "open(my $fh, ...)" and
"open(local $fh,...)" to be used to create filehandles that will conveniently be closed automatically
when the scope ends, provided there are no other references to them. This largely eliminates the need
for typeglobs when opening filehandles that must be passed around, as in the following example:
sub myopen {
open my $fh, "@_"
or die "Can't open '@_': $!";
return $fh;
}
{
my $f = myopen("</etc/motd");
print <$f>;
# $f implicitly closed here
}
Note that if an initialized scalar variable is used instead the result is different: "my $fh='zzz';
open($fh, ...)" is equivalent to "open( *{'zzz'}, ...)". "use strict 'refs'" forbids such practice.
Another way to create anonymous filehandles is with the Symbol module or with the IO::Handle module and
its ilk. These modules have the advantage of not hiding different types of the same name during the
local(). See the bottom of "open" in perlfunc for an example.
SEE ALSO
See perlvar for a description of Perl's built-in variables and a discussion of legal variable names. See
perlref, perlsub, and "Symbol Tables" in perlmod for more discussion on typeglobs and the *foo{THING}
syntax.
perl v5.22.1 2020-10-19 PERLDATA(1)