|
Chapter 15 Perl Quick Reference |
|
- $var
-
A simple scalar variable.
- $var[28]
-
29th element of array @var.
- $p = \@var
-
Now $p is a reference to array @var.
- $$p[28]
-
29th element of array referenced by $p.
Also, $p->[28].
- $var[-1]
-
Last element of array @var.
- $var[$i][$j]
-
$j-th element of $i-th element of array @var.
- $var{'Feb'}
-
A value from hash (associative array) %var.
- $p = \%var
-
Now $p is a reference to hash %var.
- $$p{'Feb'}
-
A value from hash referenced by $p.
Also, $p->{'Feb'}.
- $#var
-
Last index of array @var.
- @var
-
The entire array;
in a scalar context, the number of elements in the array.
- @var[3,4,5]
-
A slice of array @var.
- @var{'a','b'}
-
A slice of %var; same as ($var{'a'},$var{'b'}).
- %var
-
The entire hash;
in a scalar context, true if the hash has elements.
- $var{'a',1,...}
-
Emulates a multidimensional array.
- ('a'...'z')[4,7,9]
-
A slice of an array literal.
- pkg::var
-
A variable from a package, e.g., $pkg::var, @pkg::ary.
- \object
-
Reference to an object, e.g., \$var, \%hash.
- *name
-
Refers to all objects represented by name.
*n1 = *n2 makes n1 an alias for n2.
*n1 = $n2 makes $n1 an alias for $n2.
You can always use a { block } returning the right type of reference
instead of the variable identifier, e.g., ${...}, &{...}.
$$p is just a shorthand for ${$p}.
|
|