Charles K. Clarkson wrote:
>
> : While the foreach is certainly more wasteful, why in
> : the world would you re-initialize and re-open the
> : file multiple times? Why not just open the file once
> : and iterate over the file, comparing each line of
> : the file to each of the keys in the %input h
Ed Christian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
: While the foreach is certainly more wasteful, why in
: the world would you re-initialize and re-open the
: file multiple times? Why not just open the file once
: and iterate over the file, comparing each line of
: the file to each of the keys in the %inpu
James Edward Gray II wrote:
>
> On Jan 2, 2004, at 10:46 AM, Ed Christian wrote:
>
> > James Edward Gray II wrote:
> >> On Jan 2, 2004, at 10:10 AM, Paul Kraus wrote:
> >>
> Don't do that. The foreach reads the whole file into memory and
> then walks it line by line. If we just want one
On Jan 2, 2004, at 10:46 AM, Ed Christian wrote:
James Edward Gray II wrote:
On Jan 2, 2004, at 10:10 AM, Paul Kraus wrote:
Don't do that. The foreach reads the whole file into memory and
then walks it line by line. If we just want one at a time, let's
fetch them that way
I don't agree with thi
James Edward Gray II wrote:
> On Jan 2, 2004, at 10:10 AM, Paul Kraus wrote:
>
>>> Don't do that. The foreach reads the whole file into memory and
>>> then walks it line by line. If we just want one at a time, let's
>>> fetch them that way
>>
>> I don't agree with this.
>
> And I don't underst
On Jan 2, 2004, at 10:26 AM, Paul Kraus wrote:
I don't agree with this.
And I don't understand this. ;)
I don't expect the minds of mere mortal to comprehend my infinite
knowledge
;) (Tongue firmly in cheek)
Yeah, you know us pesky mortals.
If you're going to work with the lines one at a time a
> > I don't agree with this.
>
> And I don't understand this. ;)
I don't expect the minds of mere mortal to comprehend my infinite knowledge
;) (Tongue firmly in cheek)
> If you're going to work with the lines one at a time anyway, what
> exactly is the advantage of using the probably slower and
On Jan 2, 2004, at 10:10 AM, Paul Kraus wrote:
Don't do that. The foreach reads the whole file into memory and then
walks it line by line. If we just want one at a time, let's fetch
them
that way
I don't agree with this.
And I don't understand this. ;)
If you are working with a file that is a
> Don't do that. The foreach reads the whole file into memory and then
> walks it line by line. If we just want one at a time, let's fetch them
> that way
I don't agree with this. If you are working with a file that is as small as
the one included seems to be easier to just load up some data str
Thank you James for both your advice and suggestions.
I think that solved my problem. I'm learning...
David
--- James Edward Gray II <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> On Jan 2, 2004, at 9:33 AM, David Byrne wrote:
>
> > Greetings,
>
> Howdy.
>
> > I've created a hash from an INPUT file and I'm
>
> Greetings,
Hello
> I've created a hash from an INPUT file and I'm trying
> to search for each key from the hash in a DATA file.
> However, I can't get my script to iteratively loop
> through the DATA file for each key. Instead it loops
> through DATA once for the first key. Below is some
> sam
On Jan 2, 2004, at 9:33 AM, David Byrne wrote:
Greetings,
Howdy.
I've created a hash from an INPUT file and I'm trying
to search for each key from the hash in a DATA file.
I'm a little fuzzy on this part, but will see if I can figure it out.
However, I can't get my script to iteratively loop
thr
Greetings,
I've created a hash from an INPUT file and I'm trying
to search for each key from the hash in a DATA file.
However, I can't get my script to iteratively loop
through the DATA file for each key. Instead it loops
through DATA once for the first key. Below is some
sample data, intended
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