4. Arrays
Contents:
Works of art, in my opinion, are the only objects in the material universe to possess internal order, and that is why, though I don't believe that only art matters, I do believe in Art for Art's sake. - E.M. Forster 4.0. IntroductionIf you are asked about the contents of your pockets, or the names of the last three presidents, or how to get to the highway, you recite a list: you name one thing after another in a particular order. Lists are part of your conception of the world. With Perl's powerful list- and array-handling primitives, you can translate this world view directly into code.
In this chapter, we'll use the terms
list
and
array
as the Perl language thinks of them. Take
This distinction may seem arbitrary, but operations that modify the length of these groupings (like The most important thing to glean from this is that Perl's lists and arrays are both ordered groupings of scalars. Operators and functions that work on lists or arrays are designed to provide faster or more convenient access to the elements than manual access would provide. Since few actually deal with modifying the array's length, you can usually use arrays and lists interchangeably. You can't use nested parentheses to create a list of lists. If you try that in Perl, your lists get flattened , meaning that both these lines are equivalent: @nested = ("this", "that", "the", "other"); @nested = ("this", "that", ("the", "other"));
Why doesn't Perl (usefully) just support nested lists directly? Although partially for historical reasons, this easily allows for operations (like What happens if you want a more complex data structure, such as an array of arrays or an array of hashes? Remember that scalars aren't restricted to containing just numbers or strings; they can also hold references. Complex (multilevel) data structures in Perl are always put together using references. Therefore, what appear to be "two-dimensional arrays" or "arrays of arrays" are always implemented as arrays of array references , in the same way that two-dimensional arrays in C can be arrays of pointers to arrays. Most recipes in this chapter don't care what you keep in your arrays; for example, the problem of merging two arrays is the same whether the arrays contains strings, numbers, or references. Some problems are intrinsically tied to the contents of your arrays; recipes for those are in Chapter 11, References and Records . This chapter's recipes deal with generic arrays.
Let's have some more terminology. The scalar items in an array or list are called
elements
, which you access by specifying their position, or
index
. Indices in Perl start at @tune = ( "The", "Star-Spangled", "Banner" );
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