Perl: Difference between revisions

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==stringifying==
==stringifying==
Forcing variables to make sense in a string is called stringifying them.
Forcing variables to make sense in a string is called stringifying them.
== scalar context & list context==
==scalar context & list context==
  print @array1;
  print @array1;
  $scalar1 = @array1;
  $scalar1 = @array1;
#The first line is in list context. In list context, an array returns the list of its elements.
#The first line is in list context. In list context, an array returns the list of its elements.
# In the second line however, the assignment wants to see a single result, or scalar value, and therefore it is in scalar context. In scalar context an array returns the number of its elements.
# In the second line however, the assignment wants to see a single result, or scalar value, and therefore it is in scalar context. In scalar context an array returns the number of its elements.
==change context==
We can force something to be in scalar context when it expects to be in list context by using the
scalar operator.
print @array1;
print scalar @array1;


==links==
==links==
[[Category:Applications]]
[[Category:Applications]]
[[Category:Unix]]
[[Category:Unix]]

Revision as of 20:04, 17 June 2012

Reading

http://www.perl.org/books/beginning-perl/

Perl

Pathologically Eclectic Rubbish Lister

Larry Wall wrote it.

variables

the three types of variables in Perl are:

scalars = numbers, strings, or references    denoted $ 
arrays = sequentially-numbered lists of scalars     denoted @
hashes.= key-referenced lists of scalars     denoted %

operators

Operator                   Num     Str
--------------------------------------
Equal                      ==      eq
Not equal                  !=      ne
Less than                   <      lt
Greater than                >      gt
Less than or equal to      <=      le
Greater than or equal to   >=      ge

man pages

perl      - overview               perlfaq   - frequently asked questions
perltoc   - doc TOC                perldata  - data structures
perlsyn   - syntax                 perlop    - operators and precedence
perlrun   - execution              perlfunc  - builtin functions
perltrap  - traps for the unwary   perlstyle - style guide

"perldoc" and "perldoc -f"

cpan

Comprehensive perl archive network

Perl kurs

Christer Ekholm
First two letters and first letter of last name@init.se
TIMTOWTDI (There Is More Than One Way To Do It)

Dictionary

regexp		regular expression . a* a? ^a a$,perls RE för andra.
semantik	meaning that is expressed in a language and words
notation	ways to represent a mathematical equation
analogi		motsvarighet, nagot svart beskrivs enkelt
iteration	upprepning
deklarera	förklara
definera	definera subrutiner
context		sammanhang
explicit	uttryckligen
implicit	underförstått
logiska operatorer	and,or,not,||,&&,!
aritmetisk	+-/*
bitoperatorer	AND,OR,XOR,leftand right shift.
re		reguljära utryck, mönsterpassning.
statement	If functions are the verbs of Perl, then statements are the sentences.
scalar literal constant	varaiable that cant change
interpolated	Variable has been expanded
Boolean operators	The idea of combining values that represent truth and falsehood is called Boolean logic,after George Boole, who invented the concept in 1847, and we call the operators that do the combining 'Boolean operators'.

boolean operators

numeriska	sträng
==	!=	eq 	ne
<	>	lt	gt
<=	>=	le	ge
<=>		cmp

comparison

#!/usr/bin/perl
use warnings;
print"Is two equal to four? ", 2 == 4, "\n";
print "OK, then, is six equal to six? ", 6 == 6, "\n";
print"So, two isn't equal to four? ", 2 != 4, "\n";
print"Five is more than six? ", 5 > 6, "\n";
print "Seven is less than sixteen? ", 7 < 16, "\n";
print "Two is equal to two? ", 2 == 2, "\n";
print "One is more than one? ", 1 > 1, "\n";
print "Six is not equal to seven? ", 6 != 7, "\n";
print"Seven is less than or equal to sixteen? ", 7 <= 16, "\n";
print "Two is more than or equal to two? ", 2 >= 2, "\n";
Is two equal to four?
OK, then, is six equal to six? 1
So, two isn't equal to four? 1
Five is more than six?
Seven is less than sixteen? 1
Two is equal to two? 1
One is more than one?
Six is not equal to seven? 1
Seven is less than or equal to sixteen? 1
Two is more than or equal to two? 1
print "1 <= 0 => -1", "\n";
print "Compare six and nine? ", 6 <=> 9, "\n";
print "Compare seven and seven? ",7 <=> 7, "\n";
print "Compare eight and four? ", 8 <=> 4, "\n";
print 6 > 3 && 12 > 4, "\n"; # 1
print 9 > 7 || 6 > 8, "\n";  # 1
print !(2>3), "\n";          # 1
print !2>3, "\n";            # 0

How to get information

perldoc -f variabler	Show help page for variables
perldoc -f -X		Show file handle test.
perldoc perlform	Format information
perldoc Getopt::Long	Show help for Getopt
perldoc -q		Letar i perl faq
perldoc perlmodlib	Lista inbyggda moduler
perldoc perlpod

Debug

emacs M-x perldb	Debugga perl i emacs
perl -d:ptkdb /scrpt	Debugga perl  

Perl code

use strict;	explesist namnge package variable
use warning;	show warning messages
perl -w		show warning messages
use Getopt::Long:	Use getoptions module

package mypkg; change package

Perl Oneliners:

perl -ne 'print if /a/'			Grep all lines containing a. (-n create a loop) (-e, allows you to define Perl code to be executed by the compiler)
perl -e 'print join("\n",@INC),"\n"'	Var söker perl efter moduler
perl -c kod.pl				Kontrollera koden.

regex

.		one key
^		beginning of line
$		end of line
/^[xfi]/	Starting with one x or f or i
/^[h-j]/	Starting with one h or i or j
()		Deluttryck
quantifier	how much a string matches.
?		Noll eller en gång
a*		a with 0 to unlimit a
a+		one or more a
{m}		exackt m ggr
{m,}		minst m ggr
{m,n}		minst m max n ggr
=~ m|^abc|	matchar abc i början
.+?		matchar så lite som möjligt
modifierare	
/i/i		matchar i case insensitiv
a.b		a any key b
^a.c$		starting with a any key end with c
X1*		X1 folles by 0 to many 1
^[]abc]		strings starting with any of ]abc
[^zxy]		Does not have any of zxy in possition
a{8}		aaaaaaaa
uttr{m,n}	uttr förekommer mellan m och n gånger
^ *$		empty line or only blanks

Special meaning

$		skalär
@		lista
%		hash, associativa vektorer
$#		maximun index in list
$@		string that eval generates.
\s		remove space,tab,lf...
\s+		godtyckligt
\l		Convert to lower case.
$_		Default output input
$$		processid
$?		exit status
@_		variable to send to subroutin
@ARGV		argument list. ('-v','-g','10','logfile')
$|=1;		dont flush output stty
$"=',';		dubbelfnuttade listor
_		fil operatorer och stat kan återänväda stat förfrågan.
$.		Radräknare
$1		Delutryck som matchade
local $/	
@INC		directories to find per modules, add directory export PERL5LIB=/bin:/hej

&sub		subrutin
$var2=\$var	refere var2 to var
@list('a',1,$a)	add tree elements to list
@list([@odd])	add copy of list called anonymous list
$list[5]	6 possition in list
@list = qw<Jan Feb>;	Generate list

$hash{'var'}	element with index var in hash
%hash{'a'}='5';	add key a value 5
if (exist($hash{a})){	run if key a exist i hash hash
delete($hash{'a'});	delete key a fron hash
split(' ',$str);	split list output whith ' '
my		lexikal variabel, lokal variabel
$main::var	main variabel

styrstrukturer

  • iterationer
while [EXPR] BLOCK
until [EXPR] BLOCK
do BLOCK while [EXPR]
do BLOCK until [EXPR]
for VAR (EXPR) BLOCK
for (EXPR1; EXPR2; EXPR3) BLOCK
  • selection
if (EXPR) BLOCK
if (EXPR) BLOCK1 elsif (EXPR2) BLOCK2... elxe BLOCKn
unless (EXPR) BLOCK

filehandels

STDIN,STDOUT,STDERR

sträng list konverteringar

join (EXPR,LIST)
@words = ("merry", "go", "round");
$str = join("-",@words);
split (REGEXP,EXPR)
$str = "sys:x:3:3:sys:/dev:/bin/sh";
@fields = split (/:/, $str);
for $rad ( @fields ){
    print "$rad\n";
}
sub usage {
    print "use this command with optional -v"
}
&subrutin(15,101,38)	arguments are sent to a subroutin as a list

command options

use Getopt::Long;
my %opts;
GetOptions(\%opts,'v','g=i') || &usage;
print "$opts{g}\n";
sub usage {
    print STDERR "Usage: option.pl [-v][-g n]";
    exit 1;
}

globala symboltabellen

foreach my $var ( keys %main::){
    print "$var\n";

formatting.

my $rand1 = int(rand (90));
my $rand2 = int(rand (10));
my $rand3 = int(rand (50));
printf ("%6d %6d %6d\n",$rand1,$rand2,$rand3);

filehandlers

print "Who are you?\n";
my $name = <STDIN>;
chomp($name);
print "You are $name!!!\n";

print contents of file.

my $file = "/tmp/test";
open(IN,'<',$file) || die "open $file failed: $!";
# Loopa på rader i infilen.
while ( <IN> ) {
    print $_;
}

diamond operator @ARGV

#!/usr/bin/perl
while (<>){
    print;
}

list files

opendir(DIR,"/etc");
my @files = sort grep(/x/,readdir(DIR));
closedir(DIR);

user external program

open(PING,'-|','/bin/ping -c 3 pizza');
while (defined(my $ping = <PING>)){
    print "$ping";
}
close PROG;

Backslash magic

\t          tab                   (HT, TAB)
\n          newline               (LF, NL)
\r          return                (CR)
\f          form feed             (FF)
\a          alarm (bell)          (BEL)
\e          escape (think troff)  (ESC)
\033        octal char (think of a PDP-11)
\x1B        hex char
\c[         control char
\l          lowercase next char (think vi)
\u          uppercase next char (think vi)
\L          lowercase till \E (think vi)
\U          uppercase till \E (think vi)
\E          end case modification (think vi)
\Q          quote (disable) pattern metacharacters till \E

\w  Match a "word" character (alphanumeric plus "_")
\W  Match a non-word character
\s  Match a whitespace character
\S  Match a non-whitespace character
\d  Match a digit character
\D  Match a non-digit character

keywords

Words that perl is already aware of are called keywords, and they come in several classes.

print is one example of the class called functions

functions

hex() Convert Hexadecimal to number
oct() Convert Octal to number
ord() character's value
reverse () Reverse values.

control keywords

There are also control keywords, such as if and else.

block

We can also group together a bunch of statements into a block – which is a bit like a paragraph – by

surrounding them with braces: {...}

number systems.

print 255,
octal print 0377,
binary print 0b11111111,
hexadecimal print 0xFF,

Alternative Delimiters

the first acting like a single-quoted string and the second, like a double-quoted string.

q// and qq//,

here documents

print<<EOF;
This is a here-document. It starts on the line after the two arrows,
and it ends when the text following the arrows is found at the beginning
of a line, like this:
EOF

Write label with 'EOF' and her text will be single quoted.

arithmetic Operator

#!/usr/bin/perl
use warnings;
print "21 - 25 is: ", 25 - 21, "\n";
print "4 + 13 - 7 is: ", 4 + 13 - 7, "\n";
print "7 * 15 is ", 7 * 15, "\n";
print "249 / 3 is ", 249 / 3, "\n";
print 3 + 7 * 15, "\n";
print ((3 + 7) * 15);
21 - 25 is: 4
4 + 13 - 7 is: 10
7 * 15 is 105
249 / 3 is 83
108
150

lazy evaluation

Perl uses a technique called lazy evaluation. As soon as it knows the answer to the question, it stops working.

4 >= 2 and print "Four is more than or equal to two\n";

string operators

concatenation operator   print "Print " . "one ". "string " . "here" . "\n";
repetition operator      print "Andreas halfface! "x3, "\n"; # Andreas halfface! Andreas halfface! Andreas halfface!

precedence operators

->
**
! ~ \
=~ !~
* / % x
+ - .
<< >>
< > <= >= lt gt le ge
== != <=> eq ne cmp
&
| ^
&&
||
.. ...
?:
, =>
not
and
or xor

Operating and Assigning at Once

Operations, like fetching a value, modifying it, or storing it, are very common, so there's a special syntax for them. Generally:

$a = $a <some operator> $b;

can be written as

$a <some operator>= $b;
$a = 6 * 9;
print "Six nines are ", $a, "\n";
# Six nines are 54
$a += 3;
print "Plus three is ", $a, "\n";
# Plus three is 57
$a /= 3;
print "All over three is ", $a, "\n";
# All over three is 19

operator: Autoincrement and Autodecrement

++ and --
# First we set up our variables, giving the values 4 and 10 to $a and $b, respectively. :
$a=4;
$b=10;
print "Our variables are ", $a, " and ", $b, "\n";
# Now in the following line, the assignment happens before the increment. So $b is set to $a's current value, 4 and then $a is autoincremented, becoming 5.
$b=$a++;
print "After incrementing, we have ", $a, " and ", $b, "\n";
# This time, however, the incrementing takes place first. $a is now 6, and $b is set to twice that, 12.
$b=++$a*2;
print "Now, we have ", $a, " and ", $b, "\n";
# Finally, $b is decremented first and becomes 11. $a is set to $b plus 4, which is 15.
$a=--$b+4;
print "Finally, we have ", $a, " and ", $b, "\n";

use strict

use strict to verify that we declare variables.

Lexical variable

my $variable;

global variable

our declare globals

standard input to scripts

print "Please enter something interesting\n";
$comment = <STDIN>;

array

array consistes of a list of elements

hash

hash. associative arrays look a bit like arrays where each element is associated with another value.

define hash alternatives

However, there's another trick. When your lists are made up purely from single words, you can specify them with the qw// operator. You can choose any paired brackets or non-word characters as your delimiters. The following lists are all identical:

('one', 'two', 'three', 'four')
qw/one two three four/
qw(one two three four)
qw<one two three four>
qw{one two three four}
qw[one two three four]
qw|one two three four|

defining word from hash

[-1] # Count from backward from end.
(19, 68, 47, 60, 53, 51, 58, 55, 47)[4, 5, 6] # list slice, Define words from list.

list allowed on left side of assignment operator.Right hand sid is build up first

($mone, $mtwo) = (1, 3);

$mone is set to 1, and $mtwo to 3. But how does this work? Perl allows lists on the left-hand side of an assignment operator – we say that lists are legal lvalues. When we assign one list to another, the right-hand list is built up first. Then perl assigns each element in turn, from the right hand side of the statement to the left. So 1 is assigned to $mone, and then 3 is assigned to $mtwo.

define series of elements to list

(1 .. 6)
The right-hand number must, however, be higher than the left-hand one, s
print "Counting up: ", (1 .. 6), "\n";
# Counting up: 123456
print "Counting down: ", reverse(1 .. 6), "\n";
# Counting down: 654321

stringifying

Forcing variables to make sense in a string is called stringifying them.

scalar context & list context

print @array1;
$scalar1 = @array1;
  1. The first line is in list context. In list context, an array returns the list of its elements.
  2. In the second line however, the assignment wants to see a single result, or scalar value, and therefore it is in scalar context. In scalar context an array returns the number of its elements.

change context

We can force something to be in scalar context when it expects to be in list context by using the scalar operator.

print @array1;
print scalar @array1;

links