Mumia W. a écrit :
On 10/11/2006 10:42 AM, Sami FANTAR wrote:
[...]
I have read the Data::Dumper related doc.
Including the part where it tells you how to substitute the correct
variable names for $VAR1,$VAR2,... ?
But, after having written your example, the output seems quite weird.
I got
On 10/11/2006 10:42 AM, Sami FANTAR wrote:
[...]
I have read the Data::Dumper related doc.
Including the part where it tells you how to substitute the correct
variable names for $VAR1,$VAR2,... ?
But, after having written your example, the output seems quite weird.
I got $VAR1,$VAR2, and so
Rob Coops wrote:
: Simply do this in your perl script:
: *use Data::Dumper;*
: *print Dumper @huge_array;*
For the archives:
Those asterisks (*) are for emphasis. They are not
actually in the code. Arrays and hashes can also be
dumped using a reference. I find a reference more
aesthetica
Rob Coops a écrit :
Hi Sami,
Yes Data::Dumper is your friend when it comes to dumping data (how
strange
is that :-)
Simply do this in your perl script:
*use Data::Dumper;*
*print Dumper @huge_array;*
And be amazed ;-)
On 10/11/06, Sami FANTAR <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hello everybody
Hi Sami,
Yes Data::Dumper is your friend when it comes to dumping data (how strange
is that :-)
Simply do this in your perl script:
*use Data::Dumper;*
*print Dumper @huge_array;*
And be amazed ;-)
On 10/11/06, Sami FANTAR <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hello everybody
I would like to know
Hello everybody
I would like to know if there is any module which can display in a
enjoyable way the content of an array with about 200 values.
Could Data::Dumper be a solution for my problem?
Any help or example will be very appreciated.
Thanks in advance.
--
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL