This chapter gives a brief description of Perl's built-in functions.
Each description gives the syntax of the function, with the
types and order of its arguments.
Required arguments are shown in italics, separated by commas.
If an argument must
be a specific variable type, that variable's identifier will
be used (i.e., a percent sign for a hash,
%
hash
).
Optional arguments are placed in brackets. Do not actually use
the brackets in your function calls unless you really want to
use an anonymous hash reference.
There are different ways to use
a built-in function. For starters, any argument
that requires a scalar value can be made up of any expression that
returns one. For example, you can obtain the square root of the
first value in an array:
$root = sqrt (shift @numbers);
shift
removes the first element of
@numbers
and returns it to be used by
sqrt
.
Many functions take a list of scalars for arguments. Any
array variable or other expression that returns a list can
be used for all or part of the arguments. For example:
chmod (split /,/ FILELIST>); # an expression returns a list
chmod 0755, @executables; # array used for part of arguments
In the first line, the
split
expression reads a string
from a filehandle and splits it into a list. The list provides
proper arguments for
chmod
.
The second line uses an array that contains a list of filenames
for
chmod
to act upon.
Parentheses are not required around a function's arguments.
However, without parentheses, functions are viewed as operators
in an expression (the same is true of predeclared subroutines).
If you use a function in a complex expression, you may want to use
parentheses for clarity.
See
Chapter 4,
The Perl Language
, for more about precedence
in Perl expressions.
Here are Perl's functions and function-like keywords, arranged by
category. Note that some functions appear under more than one heading.
-
Scalar manipulation
-
chomp
,
chop
,
chr
,
crypt
,
hex
,
index
,
lc
,
lcfirst
,
length
,
oct
,
ord
,
pack
,
q//
,
qq//
,
reverse
,
rindex
,
sprintf
,
substr
,
tr///
,
uc
,
ucfirst
,
y///
-
Regular expressions and pattern matching
-
m//
,
pos
,
qr//
,
quotemeta
,
s///
,
split
,
study
-
Numeric functions
-
abs
,
atan2
,
cos
,
exp
,
hex
,
int
,
log
,
oct
,
rand
,
sin
,
sqrt
,
srand
-
Array processing
-
pop
,
push
,
shift
,
splice
,
unshift
-
List processing
-
grep
,
join
,
map
,
qw//
,
reverse
,
sort
,
unpack
-
Hash processing
-
delete
,
each
,
exists
,
keys
,
values
-
Input and output
-
binmode
,
close
,
closedir
,
dbmclose
,
dbmopen
,
die
,
eof
,
fileno
,
flock
,
format
,
getc
,
print
,
printf
,
read
,
readdir
,
rewinddir
,
seek
,
seekdir
,
select
,
syscall
,
sysread
,
sysseek
,
syswrite
,
tell
,
telldir
,
truncate
,
warn
,
write
-
Fixed-length data and records
-
pack
,
read
,
syscall
,
sysread
,
syswrite
,
unpack
,
vec
-
Filehandles, files, and directories
-
chdir
,
chmod
,
chown
,
chroot
,
fcntl
,
glob
,
ioctl
,
link
,
lstat
,
mkdir
,
open
,
opendir
,
readlink
,
rename
,
rmdir
,
stat
,
symlink
,
sysopen
,
umask
,
unlink
,
utime
-
Flow of program control
-
caller
,
continue
,
die
,
do
,
dump
,
eval
,
exit
,
goto
,
last
,
next
,
redo
,
return
,
sub
,
wantarray
-
Scoping
-
caller
,
import
,
local
,
my
,
package
,
use
-
Miscellaneous
-
defined
,
dump
,
eval
,
formline
,
local
,
my
,
prototype
,
reset
,
scalar
,
undef
,
wantarray
-
Processes and process groups
-
alarm
,
exec
,
fork
,
getpgrp
,
getppid
,
getpriority
,
kill
,
pipe
,
qx//
,
setpgrp
,
setpriority
,
sleep
,
system
,
times
,
wait
,
waitpid
-
Library modules
-
do
,
import
,
no
,
package
,
require
,
use
-
Classes and objects
-
bless
,
dbmclose
,
dbmopen
,
package
,
ref
,
tie
,
tied
,
untie
,
use
-
Low-level socket access
-
accept
,
bind
,
connect
,
getpeername
,
getsockname
,
getsockopt
,
listen
,
recv
,
send
,
setsockopt
,
shutdown
,
socket
,
socketpair
-
System V interprocess communication
-
msgctl
,
msgget
,
msgrcv
,
msgsnd
,
semctl
,
semget
,
semop
,
shmctl
,
shmget
,
shmread
,
shmwrite
-
Fetching user and group information
-
endgrent
,
endhostent
,
endnetent
,
endpwent
,
getgrent
,
getgrgid
,
getgrnam
,
getlogin
,
getpwent
,
getpwnam
,
getpwuid
,
setgrent
,
setpwent
-
Fetching network information
-
endprotoent
,
endservent
,
gethostbyaddr
,
gethostbyname
,
gethostent
,
getnetbyaddr
,
getnetbyname
,
getnetent
,
getprotobyname
,
getprotobynumber
,
getprotoent
,
getservbyname
,
getservbyport
,
getservent
,
sethostent
,
setnetent
,
setprotoent
,
setservent
-
Time
-
gmtime
,
localtime
,
time
,
times
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