Richard Lee wrote:
Gunnar Hjalmarsson wrote:
Richard Lee wrote:
------------ code of Gunnar's ----------------
my $numbers_wanted = 2;
my ( @datawanted, @numbers );
LOOP: foreach ( @datas ) {
my @test = split;
foreach my $num ( @numbers ) {
next LOOP if grep( $num->{$_}, @test ) >= $numbers_wanted;
}
push @datawanted, $_;
push @numbers, { map { $_ => 1 } @test };
}
print "$_\n" for @datawanted;
It iterates over @datas and stores some of the elements in @datawanted
based on (my interpretation of) the OP's criteria. There is nothing
mysterious with the code; everything can be looked up in the Perl docs.
@numbers is a help variable where the numbers in previously stored
elements are made conveniently accessible for lookups. The expression
map { $_ => 1 } @test
creates a key/value list where the elements of @test are the keys (see
"perldoc -f map"), and
push @numbers, { map { $_ => 1 } @test };
makes the list an anonymous hash and adds a reference to that hash to
@numbers.
grep() is used in scalar context to compare the elements with
previously stored elements and test against the OP's criteria.
perldoc -f grep
why does program go over empty array at the begining?
foreach my $num ( @numbers ) {
next LOOP if grep( $num->{$_}, @test ) >= $numbers_wanted;
}
Since @numbers is empty at the first iteration of the outer loop, the
program skips the inner loop. So what?
I simply posted some code that gives the desired result. Please feel
free to criticize the code or post an alternative solution, but I don't
see the point with asking "why" with respect to a piece of code out of
context.
--
Gunnar Hjalmarsson
Email: http://www.gunnar.cc/cgi-bin/contact.pl
--
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://learn.perl.org/