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Perl language structure

The structure of the Perl programming language encompasses both the syntactical rules of the language and the general ways in which programs are organized. Perl's design philosophy is expressed in the commonly cited motto "there's more than one way to do it". As a multi-paradigm, dynamically typed language, Perl allows a great degree of flexibility in program design. Perl also encourages modularization; this has been attributed to the component-based design structure of its Unix roots[when?],[1] and is responsible for the size of the CPAN archive, a community-maintained repository of more than 100,000 modules.[2]

Basic syntax edit

In Perl, the minimal Hello World program may be written as follows:

print "Hello, World!\n" 

This prints the string Hello, World! and a newline, symbolically expressed by an n character whose interpretation is altered by the preceding escape character (a backslash). Since version 5.10, the new 'say' builtin[3] produces the same effect even more simply:

say "Hello, World!" 

An entire Perl program may also be specified as a command-line parameter to Perl, so the same program can also be executed from the command line (example shown for Unix):

$ perl -e 'print "Hello, World!\n"' 

The canonical form of the program is slightly more verbose:

#!/usr/bin/perl print "Hello, World!\n"; 

The hash mark character introduces a comment in Perl, which runs up to the end of the line of code and is ignored by the compiler (except on Windows). The comment used here is of a special kind: it’s called the shebang line. This tells Unix-like operating systems to find the Perl interpreter, making it possible to invoke the program without explicitly mentioning perl. (Note that, on Microsoft Windows systems, Perl programs are typically invoked by associating the .pl extension with the Perl interpreter. In order to deal with such circumstances, perl detects the shebang line and parses it for switches.[4])

The second line in the canonical form includes a semicolon, which is used to separate statements in Perl. With only a single statement in a block or file, a separator is unnecessary, so it can be omitted from the minimal form of the program—or more generally from the final statement in any block or file. The canonical form includes it, because it is common to terminate every statement even when it is unnecessary to do so, as this makes editing easier: code can be added to, or moved away from, the end of a block or file without having to adjust semicolons.

Version 5.10 of Perl introduces a say function that implicitly appends a newline character to its output, making the minimal "Hello World" program even shorter:

use 5.010; # must be present to import the new 5.10 functions, notice that it is 5.010 not 5.10 say 'Hello, World!' 

Data types edit

Perl has a number of fundamental data types. The most commonly used and discussed are scalars, arrays, hashes, filehandles, and subroutines:

Type Sigil Example Description
Scalar $ $foo A single value; it may be a number, a string, a filehandle, or a reference.
Array @ @foo An ordered collection of scalars.
Hash % %foo A map from strings to scalars; the strings are called keys, and the scalars are called values. Also known as an associative array.
Filehandle none $foo or FOO An opaque representation of an open file or other target for reading, writing, or both.
Subroutine & &foo A piece of code that may be passed arguments, be executed, and return data.
Typeglob * *foo The symbol table entry for all types with the name 'foo'.

Scalar values edit

String values (literals) must be enclosed by quotes. Enclosing a string in double quotes allows the values of variables whose names appear in the string to automatically replace the variable name (or be interpolated) in the string. Enclosing a string in single quotes prevents variable interpolation.

For example, if $name is "Jim":

  • then print("My name is $name") will print "My name is Jim" (interpolation within double quotes),
  • but print('My name is $name') will print "My name is $name" (no interpolation within single quotes).

To include a double quotation mark in a string, precede it with a backslash or enclose the string in single quotes. To include a single quotation mark, precede it with a backslash or enclose the string in double quotes.

Strings can also be quoted with the q and qq quote-like operators:

  • 'this' and q(this) are identical,
  • "$this" and qq($this) are identical.

Finally, multiline strings can be defined using here documents:

$multilined_string = <<EOF; This is my multilined string note that I am terminating it with the word "EOF". EOF 

Numbers (numeric constants) do not require quotation. Perl will convert numbers into strings and vice versa depending on the context in which they are used. When strings are converted into numbers, trailing non-numeric parts of the strings are discarded. If no leading part of a string is numeric, the string will be converted to the number 0. In the following example, the strings $n and $m are treated as numbers. This code prints the number '5'. The values of the variables remain the same. Note that in Perl, + is always the numeric addition operator. The string concatenation operator is the period.

$n = '3 apples'; $m = '2 oranges'; print $n + $m; 

Functions are provided for the rounding of fractional values to integer values: int chops off the fractional part, rounding towards zero; POSIX::ceil and POSIX::floor round always up and always down, respectively. The number-to-string conversion of printf "%f" or sprintf "%f" round out even, use bankers' rounding.

Perl also has a boolean context that it uses in evaluating conditional statements. The following values all evaluate as false in Perl:

$false = 0; # the number zero $false = 0.0; # the number zero as a float $false = 0b0; # the number zero in binary $false = 0x0; # the number zero in hexadecimal $false = '0'; # the string zero $false = ""; # the empty string $false = (); # the empty list $false = undef; # the return value from undef $false = 2-3+1 # computes to 0 that is converted to "0" so it is false 

All other (non-zero evaluating) values evaluate to true. This includes the odd self-describing literal string of "0 but true", which in fact is 0 as a number, but true when used as a boolean. All non-numeric strings also have this property, but this particular string is truncated by Perl without a numeric warning. A less explicit but more conceptually portable version of this string is '0E0' or '0e0', which does not rely on characters being evaluated as 0, because '0E0' is literally zero times ten to the power zero. The empty hash {} is also true; in this context {} is not an empty block, because perl -e 'print ref {}' returns HASH.

Evaluated boolean expressions are also scalar values. The documentation does not promise which particular value of true or false is returned. Many boolean operators return 1 for true and the empty-string for false. The defined() function determines whether a variable has any value set. In the above examples, defined($false) is true for every value except undef.

If either 1 or 0 are specifically needed, an explicit conversion can be done using the conditional operator:

my $real_result = $boolean_result ? 1 : 0; 

Array values edit

An array value (or list) is specified by listing its elements, separated by commas, enclosed by parentheses (at least where required by operator precedence).

@scores = (32, 45, 16, 5); 

The qw() quote-like operator allows the definition of a list of strings without typing of quotes and commas. Almost any delimiter can be used instead of parentheses. The following lines are equivalent:

@names = ('Billy', 'Joe', 'Jim-Bob'); @names = qw(Billy Joe Jim-Bob); 

The split function returns a list of strings, which are split from a string expression using a delimiter string or regular expression.

@scores = split(',', '32,45,16,5'); 

Individual elements of a list are accessed by providing a numerical index in square brackets. The scalar sigil must be used. Sublists (array slices) can also be specified, using a range or list of numeric indices in brackets. The array sigil is used in this case. For example, $month[3] is "April" (the first element in an array has an index value of 0), and @month[4..6] is ("May", "June", "July").

Hash values edit

Perl programmers may initialize a hash (or associative array) from a list of key/value pairs. If the keys are separated from the values with the => operator (sometimes called a fat comma), rather than a comma, they may be unquoted (barewords[5]). The following lines are equivalent:

%favorite = ('joe', "red", 'sam', "blue"); %favorite = (joe => 'red', sam => 'blue'); 

Individual values in a hash are accessed by providing the corresponding key, in curly braces. The $ sigil identifies the accessed element as a scalar. For example, $favorite{joe} equals 'red'. A hash can also be initialized by setting its values individually:

$favorite{joe} = 'red'; $favorite{sam} = 'blue'; $favorite{oscar} = 'green'; 

Multiple elements may be accessed using the @ sigil instead (identifying the result as a list). For example, @favorite{'joe', 'sam'} equals ('red', 'blue').

Filehandles edit

Filehandles provide read and write access to resources. These are most often files on disk, but can also be a device, a pipe, or even a scalar value.

Originally, filehandles could only be created with package variables, using the ALL_CAPS convention to distinguish it from other variables. Perl 5.6 and newer also accept a scalar variable, which will be set (autovivified) to a reference to an anonymous filehandle, in place of a named filehandle.

Typeglob values edit

A typeglob value is a symbol table entry. The main use of typeglobs is creating symbol table aliases. For example:

*PI = \3.141592653; # creating constant scalar $PI *this = *that; # creating aliases for all data types 'this' to all data types 'that' 

Array functions edit

The number of elements in an array can be determined either by evaluating the array in scalar context or with the help of the $# sigil. The latter gives the index of the last element in the array, not the number of elements. The expressions scalar(@array) and ($#array + 1) are equivalent.

Hash functions edit

There are a few functions that operate on entire hashes. The keys function takes a hash and returns the list of its keys. Similarly, the values function returns a hash's values. Note that the keys and values are returned in a consistent but arbitrary order.

# Every call to each returns the next key/value pair. # All values will be eventually returned, but their order # cannot be predicted. while (($name, $address) = each %addressbook) {  print "$name lives at $address\n"; } # Similar to the above, but sorted alphabetically foreach my $next_name (sort keys %addressbook) {  print "$next_name lives at $addressbook{$next_name}\n"; } 

Control structures edit

Perl has several kinds of control structures.

It has block-oriented control structures, similar to those in the C, JavaScript, and Java programming languages. Conditions are surrounded by parentheses, and controlled blocks are surrounded by braces:

label while ( cond ) { … } label while ( cond ) { … } continue { … } label for ( init-expr ; cond-expr ; incr-expr ) { … } label foreach var ( list ) { … } label foreach var ( list ) { … } continue { … } if ( cond ) { … } if ( cond ) { … } else { … } if ( cond ) { … } elsif ( cond ) { … } else { … } 

Where only a single statement is being controlled, statement modifiers provide a more-concise syntax:

statement if cond ; statement unless cond ; statement while cond ; statement until cond ; statement foreach list ; 

Short-circuit logical operators are commonly used to affect control flow at the expression level:

expr and expr expr && expr expr or expr expr || expr 

(The "and" and "or" operators are similar to && and || but have lower precedence, which makes it easier to use them to control entire statements.)

The flow control keywords next (corresponding to C's continue), last (corresponding to C's break), return, and redo are expressions, so they can be used with short-circuit operators.

Perl also has two implicit looping constructs, each of which has two forms:

results = grep { … } list results = grep expr, list results = map { … } list results = map expr, list 

grep returns all elements of list for which the controlled block or expression evaluates to true. map evaluates the controlled block or expression for each element of list and returns a list of the resulting values. These constructs enable a simple functional programming style.

Up until the 5.10.0 release, there was no switch statement in Perl 5. From 5.10.0 onward, a multi-way branch statement called given/when is available, which takes the following form:

use v5.10; # must be present to import the new 5.10 functions given ( expr ) { when ( cond ) { … } default { … } } 

Syntactically, this structure behaves similarly to switch statements found in other languages, but with a few important differences. The largest is that unlike switch/case structures, given/when statements break execution after the first successful branch, rather than waiting for explicitly defined break commands. Conversely, explicit continues are instead necessary to emulate switch behavior.

For those not using Perl 5.10, the Perl documentation describes a half-dozen ways to achieve the same effect by using other control structures. There is also a Switch module, which provides functionality modeled on that of sister language Raku. It is implemented using a source filter, so its use is unofficially discouraged.[6]

Perl includes a goto label statement, but it is rarely used. Situations where a goto is called for in other languages don't occur as often in Perl, because of its breadth of flow control options.

There is also a goto &sub statement that performs a tail call. It terminates the current subroutine and immediately calls the specified sub. This is used in situations where a caller can perform more-efficient stack management than Perl itself (typically because no change to the current stack is required), and in deep recursion, tail calling can have substantial positive impact on performance, because it avoids the overhead of scope/stack management on return.

Subroutines edit

Subroutines are defined with the sub keyword and are invoked simply by naming them. If the subroutine in question has not yet been declared, invocation requires either parentheses after the function name or an ampersand (&) before it. But using & without parentheses will also implicitly pass the arguments of the current subroutine to the one called, and using & with parentheses will bypass prototypes.

# Calling a subroutine # Parentheses are required here if the subroutine is defined later in the code foo(); &foo; # (this also works, but has other consequences regarding arguments passed to the subroutine) # Defining a subroutine sub foo {  } foo; # Here parentheses are not required 

A list of arguments may be provided after the subroutine name. Arguments may be scalars, lists, or hashes.

foo $x, @y, %z; 

The parameters to a subroutine do not need to be declared as to either number or type; in fact, they may vary from call to call. Any validation of parameters must be performed explicitly inside the subroutine.

Arrays are expanded to their elements; hashes are expanded to a list of key/value pairs; and the whole lot is passed into the subroutine as one flat list of scalars.

Whatever arguments are passed are available to the subroutine in the special array @_. The elements of @_ are references to the actual arguments; changing an element of @_ changes the corresponding argument.

Elements of @_ may be accessed by subscripting it in the usual way.

$_[0], $_[1] 

However, the resulting code can be difficult to read, and the parameters have pass-by-reference semantics, which may be undesirable.

One common idiom is to assign @_ to a list of named variables.

my ($x, $y, $z) = @_; 

This provides mnemonic parameter names and implements pass-by-value semantics. The my keyword indicates that the following variables are lexically scoped to the containing block.

Another idiom is to shift parameters off of @_. This is especially common when the subroutine takes only one argument or for handling the $self argument in object-oriented modules.

my $x = shift; 

Subroutines may assign @_ to a hash to simulate named arguments; this is recommended in Perl Best Practices for subroutines that are likely to ever have more than three parameters.[7]

sub function1 {  my %args = @_;  print "'x' argument was '$args{x}'\n"; } function1( x => 23 ); 

Subroutines may return values.

return 42, $x, @y, %z; 

If the subroutine does not exit via a return statement, it returns the last expression evaluated within the subroutine body. Arrays and hashes in the return value are expanded to lists of scalars, just as they are for arguments.

The returned expression is evaluated in the calling context of the subroutine; this can surprise the unwary.

sub list { (4, 5, 6) } sub array { @x = (4, 5, 6); @x } $x = list; # returns 6 - last element of list $x = array; # returns 3 - number of elements in list @x = list; # returns (4, 5, 6) @x = array; # returns (4, 5, 6) 

A subroutine can discover its calling context with the wantarray function.

sub either {  return wantarray ? (1, 2) : 'Oranges'; } $x = either; # returns "Oranges" @x = either; # returns (1, 2) 

Anonymous functions edit

Perl 5 supports anonymous functions,[8] as follows:

(sub { print "I got called\n" })->(); # 1. fully anonymous, called as created my $squarer = sub { my $x = shift; $x * $x }; # 2. assigned to a variable sub curry {  my ($sub, @args) = @_;  return sub { $sub->(@args, @_) }; # 3. as a return value of another function } # example of currying in Perl programming sub sum { my $tot = 0; $tot += $_ for @_; $tot } # returns the sum of its arguments my $curried = curry \&sum, 5, 7, 9; print $curried->(1,2,3), "\n"; # prints 27 ( = 5 + 7 + 9 + 1 + 2 + 3 ) 

Other constructs take bare blocks as arguments, which serve a function similar to lambda functions of one parameter, but do not have the same parameter-passing convention as functions -- @_ is not set.

my @squares = map { $_ * $_ } 1..10; # map and grep don't use the 'sub' keyword my @square2 = map $_ * $_, 1..10; # braces unneeded for one expression my @bad_example = map { print for @_ } 1..10; # values not passed like normal Perl function 

Regular expressions edit

The Perl language includes a specialized syntax for writing regular expressions (RE, or regexes), and the interpreter contains an engine for matching strings to regular expressions. The regular-expression engine uses a backtracking algorithm, extending its capabilities from simple pattern matching to string capture and substitution. The regular-expression engine is derived from regex written by Henry Spencer.

The Perl regular-expression syntax was originally taken from Unix Version 8 regular expressions. However, it diverged before the first release of Perl and has since grown to include far more features. Many other languages and applications are now adopting Perl Compatible Regular Expressions over POSIX regular expressions, such as PHP, Ruby, Java, Microsoft's .NET Framework,[9] and the Apache HTTP server.

Regular-expression syntax is extremely compact, owing to history. The first regular-expression dialects were only slightly more expressive than globs, and the syntax was designed so that an expression would resemble the text that it matches.[citation needed] This meant using no more than a single punctuation character or a pair of delimiting characters to express the few supported assertions. Over time, the expressiveness of regular expressions grew tremendously, but the syntax design was never revised and continues to rely on punctuation. As a result, regular expressions can be cryptic and extremely dense.

Uses edit

The m// (match) operator introduces a regular-expression match. (If it is delimited by slashes, as in all of the examples here, the leading m may be omitted for brevity. If the m is present, as in all of the following examples, other delimiters can be used in place of slashes.) In the simplest case, an expression such as

$x =~ /abc/; 

evaluates to true if and only if the string $x matches the regular expression abc.

The s/// (substitute) operator, on the other hand, specifies a search-and-replace operation:

$x =~ s/abc/aBc/; # upcase the b 

Another use of regular expressions is to specify delimiters for the split function:

@words = split /,/, $line; 

The split function creates a list of the parts of the string that are separated by what matches the regular expression. In this example, a line is divided into a list of its own comma-separated parts, and this list is then assigned to the @words array.

Syntax edit

Modifiers edit

Perl regular expressions can take modifiers. These are single-letter suffixes that modify the meaning of the expression:

$x =~ /abc/i; # case-insensitive pattern match $x =~ s/abc/aBc/g; # global search and replace 

Because the compact syntax of regular expressions can make them dense and cryptic, the /x modifier was added in Perl to help programmers write more-legible regular expressions. It allows programmers to place whitespace and comments inside regular expressions:

$x =~ /  a # match 'a'  . # followed by any character  c # then followed by the 'c' character  /x; 

Capturing edit

Portions of a regular expression may be enclosed in parentheses; corresponding portions of a matching string are captured. Captured strings are assigned to the sequential built-in variables $1, $2, $3, …, and a list of captured strings is returned as the value of the match.

$x =~ /a(.)c/; # capture the character between 'a' and 'c' 

Captured strings $1, $2, $3, … can be used later in the code.

Perl regular expressions also allow built-in or user-defined functions to apply to the captured match, by using the /e modifier:

$x = "Oranges"; $x =~ s/(ge)/uc($1)/e; # OranGEs $x .= $1; # append $x with the contents of the match in the previous statement: OranGEsge 

Objects edit

There are many ways to write object-oriented code in Perl. The most basic is using "blessed" references. This works by identifying a reference of any type as belonging to a given package, and the package provides the methods for the blessed reference. For example, a two-dimensional point could be defined this way:

sub Point::new {  # Here, Point->new(4, 5) will result in $class being 'Point'.  # It's a variable to support subclassing (see the perloop manpage).  my ($class, $x, $y) = @_;  bless [$x, $y], $class; # Implicit return } sub Point::distance {  my ($self, $from) = @_;  my ($dx, $dy) = ($$self[0] - $$from[0], $$self[1] - $$from[1]);  sqrt($dx * $dx + $dy * $dy); } 

This class can be used by invoking new() to construct instances, and invoking distance on those instances.

my $p1 = Point->new(3, 4); my $p2 = Point->new(0, 0); print $p1->distance($p2); # Prints 5 

Many modern Perl applications use the Moose object system.[citation needed] Moose is built on top of Class::MOP, a meta-object protocol, providing complete introspection for all Moose-using classes. Thus you can ask classes about their attributes, parents, children, methods, etc. using a simple API.

Moose classes:

  • A class has zero or more attributes.
  • A class has zero or more methods.
  • A class has zero or more superclasses (aka parent classes). A class inherits from its superclass(es).
  • A class does zero or more roles, which add the ability to add pre-defined functionality to classes without subclassing.
  • A class has a constructor and a destructor.
  • A class has a metaclass.
  • A class has zero or more method modifiers. These modifiers can apply to its own methods, methods that are inherited from its ancestors, or methods that are provided by roles.

Moose roles:

  • A role is something that a class does, somewhat like mixins or interfaces in other object-oriented programming languages. Unlike mixins and interfaces, roles can be applied to individual object instances.
  • A role has zero or more attributes.
  • A role has zero or more methods.
  • A role has zero or more method modifiers.
  • A role has zero or more required methods.

Examples edit

An example of a class written using the MooseX::Declare[10] extension to Moose:

use MooseX::Declare; class Point3D extends Point {  has 'z' => (isa => 'Num', is => 'rw');  after clear {  $self->z(0);  }  method set_to (Num $x, Num $y, Num $z) {  $self->x($x);  $self->y($y);  $self->z($z);  } } 

This is a class named Point3D that extends another class named Point explained in Moose examples. It adds to its base class a new attribute z, redefines the method set_to and extends the method clear.

References edit

  1. ^ Orwant, Jon (2003). Games, diversions, and Perl culture: best of the Perl journal. ISBN 978-0-596-00312-8.
  2. ^ "CPAN front page". Retrieved 2011-12-09.
  3. ^ "Features". Perldoc. Perl.org. Retrieved 24 July 2017.
  4. ^ "perlrun". perldoc.perl.org - Official documentation for the Perl programming language. Retrieved 2011-01-08.
  5. ^ Wainwright, Peter (2005). Pro Perl. Pro to Expert Series. Apress. p. 64. ISBN 978-1-59059-438-4. Retrieved 2010-08-03. […] a string without quotes, known as a bareword string […]
  6. ^ using switch
  7. ^ Damian Conway, Perl Best Practices 2011-09-18 at the Wayback Machine, p.182
  8. ^ "perlsub - Perl subroutines - Perldoc Browser". perldoc.perl.org. Retrieved 2020-11-24.
  9. ^ Microsoft Corp., ".NET Framework Regular Expressions", .NET Framework Developer's Guide, [1]
  10. ^ MooseX::Declare documentation

External links edit

  • Perl tutorials
  • Learn Perl in about 2 hours 30 minutes
  • PerlMonks A community committed to sharing Perl knowledge and coding tips.

perl, language, structure, this, article, possibly, contains, original, research, please, improve, verifying, claims, made, adding, inline, citations, statements, consisting, only, original, research, should, removed, july, 2017, learn, when, remove, this, mes. This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed July 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message The structure of the Perl programming language encompasses both the syntactical rules of the language and the general ways in which programs are organized Perl s design philosophy is expressed in the commonly cited motto there s more than one way to do it As a multi paradigm dynamically typed language Perl allows a great degree of flexibility in program design Perl also encourages modularization this has been attributed to the component based design structure of its Unix roots when 1 and is responsible for the size of the CPAN archive a community maintained repository of more than 100 000 modules 2 Contents 1 Basic syntax 2 Data types 2 1 Scalar values 2 2 Array values 2 3 Hash values 2 4 Filehandles 2 5 Typeglob values 2 6 Array functions 2 7 Hash functions 3 Control structures 4 Subroutines 4 1 Anonymous functions 5 Regular expressions 5 1 Uses 5 2 Syntax 5 2 1 Modifiers 5 2 2 Capturing 6 Objects 6 1 Examples 7 References 8 External linksBasic syntax editIn Perl the minimal Hello World program may be written as follows print Hello World n This prints the string Hello World and a newline symbolically expressed by an n character whose interpretation is altered by the preceding escape character a backslash Since version 5 10 the new say builtin 3 produces the same effect even more simply say Hello World An entire Perl program may also be specified as a command line parameter to Perl so the same program can also be executed from the command line example shown for Unix perl e print Hello World n The canonical form of the program is slightly more verbose usr bin perl print Hello World n The hash mark character introduces a comment in Perl which runs up to the end of the line of code and is ignored by the compiler except on Windows The comment used here is of a special kind it s called the shebang line This tells Unix like operating systems to find the Perl interpreter making it possible to invoke the program without explicitly mentioning perl Note that on Microsoft Windows systems Perl programs are typically invoked by associating the pl extension with the Perl interpreter In order to deal with such circumstances perl detects the shebang line and parses it for switches 4 The second line in the canonical form includes a semicolon which is used to separate statements in Perl With only a single statement in a block or file a separator is unnecessary so it can be omitted from the minimal form of the program or more generally from the final statement in any block or file The canonical form includes it because it is common to terminate every statement even when it is unnecessary to do so as this makes editing easier code can be added to or moved away from the end of a block or file without having to adjust semicolons Version 5 10 of Perl introduces a say function that implicitly appends a newline character to its output making the minimal Hello World program even shorter use 5 010 must be present to import the new 5 10 functions notice that it is 5 010 not 5 10 say Hello World Data types editPerl has a number of fundamental data types The most commonly used and discussed are scalars arrays hashes filehandles and subroutines Type Sigil Example Description Scalar foo A single value it may be a number a string a filehandle or a reference Array foo An ordered collection of scalars Hash foo A map from strings to scalars the strings are called keys and the scalars are called values Also known as an associative array Filehandle none foo or FOO An opaque representation of an open file or other target for reading writing or both Subroutine amp amp foo A piece of code that may be passed arguments be executed and return data Typeglob foo The symbol table entry for all types with the name foo Scalar values edit String values literals must be enclosed by quotes Enclosing a string in double quotes allows the values of variables whose names appear in the string to automatically replace the variable name or be interpolated in the string Enclosing a string in single quotes prevents variable interpolation For example if name is Jim then print My name is name will print My name is Jim interpolation within double quotes but print My name is name will print My name is name no interpolation within single quotes To include a double quotation mark in a string precede it with a backslash or enclose the string in single quotes To include a single quotation mark precede it with a backslash or enclose the string in double quotes Strings can also be quoted with the q and qq quote like operators this and q this are identical this and qq this are identical Finally multiline strings can be defined using here documents multilined string lt lt EOF This is my multilined string note that I am terminating it with the word EOF EOF Numbers numeric constants do not require quotation Perl will convert numbers into strings and vice versa depending on the context in which they are used When strings are converted into numbers trailing non numeric parts of the strings are discarded If no leading part of a string is numeric the string will be converted to the number 0 In the following example the strings n and m are treated as numbers This code prints the number 5 The values of the variables remain the same Note that in Perl is always the numeric addition operator The string concatenation operator is the period n 3 apples m 2 oranges print n m Functions are provided for the rounding of fractional values to integer values int chops off the fractional part rounding towards zero POSIX ceil and POSIX floor round always up and always down respectively The number to string conversion of printf f or sprintf f round out even use bankers rounding Perl also has a boolean context that it uses in evaluating conditional statements The following values all evaluate as false in Perl false 0 the number zero false 0 0 the number zero as a float false 0b0 the number zero in binary false 0x0 the number zero in hexadecimal false 0 the string zero false the empty string false the empty list false undef the return value from undef false 2 3 1 computes to 0 that is converted to 0 so it is false All other non zero evaluating values evaluate to true This includes the odd self describing literal string of 0 but true which in fact is 0 as a number but true when used as a boolean All non numeric strings also have this property but this particular string is truncated by Perl without a numeric warning A less explicit but more conceptually portable version of this string is 0E0 or 0e0 which does not rely on characters being evaluated as 0 because 0E0 is literally zero times ten to the power zero The empty hash is also true in this context is not an empty block because perl e print ref returns HASH Evaluated boolean expressions are also scalar values The documentation does not promise which particular value of true or false is returned Many boolean operators return 1 for true and the empty string for false The defined function determines whether a variable has any value set In the above examples defined false is true for every value except undef If either 1 or 0 are specifically needed an explicit conversion can be done using the conditional operator my real result boolean result 1 0 Array values edit An array value or list is specified by listing its elements separated by commas enclosed by parentheses at least where required by operator precedence scores 32 45 16 5 The qw quote like operator allows the definition of a list of strings without typing of quotes and commas Almost any delimiter can be used instead of parentheses The following lines are equivalent names Billy Joe Jim Bob names qw Billy Joe Jim Bob The split function returns a list of strings which are split from a string expression using a delimiter string or regular expression scores split 32 45 16 5 Individual elements of a list are accessed by providing a numerical index in square brackets The scalar sigil must be used Sublists array slices can also be specified using a range or list of numeric indices in brackets The array sigil is used in this case For example month 3 is April the first element in an array has an index value of 0 and month 4 6 is May June July Hash values edit Perl programmers may initialize a hash or associative array from a list of key value pairs If the keys are separated from the values with the gt operator sometimes called a fat comma rather than a comma they may be unquoted barewords 5 The following lines are equivalent favorite joe red sam blue favorite joe gt red sam gt blue Individual values in a hash are accessed by providing the corresponding key in curly braces The sigil identifies the accessed element as a scalar For example favorite joe equals red A hash can also be initialized by setting its values individually favorite joe red favorite sam blue favorite oscar green Multiple elements may be accessed using the sigil instead identifying the result as a list For example favorite joe sam equals red blue Filehandles edit Filehandles provide read and write access to resources These are most often files on disk but can also be a device a pipe or even a scalar value Originally filehandles could only be created with package variables using the ALL CAPS convention to distinguish it from other variables Perl 5 6 and newer also accept a scalar variable which will be set autovivified to a reference to an anonymous filehandle in place of a named filehandle Typeglob values edit A typeglob value is a symbol table entry The main use of typeglobs is creating symbol table aliases For example PI 3 141592653 creating constant scalar PI this that creating aliases for all data types this to all data types that Array functions edit The number of elements in an array can be determined either by evaluating the array in scalar context or with the help of the sigil The latter gives the index of the last element in the array not the number of elements The expressions scalar array and array 1 are equivalent Hash functions edit There are a few functions that operate on entire hashes The keys function takes a hash and returns the list of its keys Similarly the values function returns a hash s values Note that the keys and values are returned in a consistent but arbitrary order Every call to each returns the next key value pair All values will be eventually returned but their order cannot be predicted while name address each addressbook print name lives at address n Similar to the above but sorted alphabetically foreach my next name sort keys addressbook print next name lives at addressbook next name n Control structures editMain article Perl control structures Perl has several kinds of control structures It has block oriented control structures similar to those in the C JavaScript and Java programming languages Conditions are surrounded by parentheses and controlled blocks are surrounded by braces label while cond label while cond continue label for init expr cond expr incr expr label foreach var list label foreach var list continue if cond if cond else if cond elsif cond else Where only a single statement is being controlled statement modifiers provide a more concise syntax statement if cond statement unless cond statement while cond statement until cond statement foreach list Short circuit logical operators are commonly used to affect control flow at the expression level expr and expr expr amp amp expr expr or expr expr expr The and and or operators are similar to amp amp and but have lower precedence which makes it easier to use them to control entire statements The flow control keywords next corresponding to C s continue last corresponding to C s break return and redo are expressions so they can be used with short circuit operators Perl also has two implicit looping constructs each of which has two forms results grep list results grep expr list results map list results map expr list grep returns all elements of list for which the controlled block or expression evaluates to true map evaluates the controlled block or expression for each element of list and returns a list of the resulting values These constructs enable a simple functional programming style Up until the 5 10 0 release there was no switch statement in Perl 5 From 5 10 0 onward a multi way branch statement called given when is available which takes the following form use v5 10 must be present to import the new 5 10 functions given expr when cond default Syntactically this structure behaves similarly to switch statements found in other languages but with a few important differences The largest is that unlike switch case structures given when statements break execution after the first successful branch rather than waiting for explicitly defined break commands Conversely explicit continues are instead necessary to emulate switch behavior For those not using Perl 5 10 the Perl documentation describes a half dozen ways to achieve the same effect by using other control structures There is also a Switch module which provides functionality modeled on that of sister language Raku It is implemented using a source filter so its use is unofficially discouraged 6 Perl includes a goto label statement but it is rarely used Situations where a goto is called for in other languages don t occur as often in Perl because of its breadth of flow control options There is also a goto amp sub statement that performs a tail call It terminates the current subroutine and immediately calls the specified i sub i This is used in situations where a caller can perform more efficient stack management than Perl itself typically because no change to the current stack is required and in deep recursion tail calling can have substantial positive impact on performance because it avoids the overhead of scope stack management on return Subroutines editSubroutines are defined with the sub keyword and are invoked simply by naming them If the subroutine in question has not yet been declared invocation requires either parentheses after the function name or an ampersand amp before it But using amp without parentheses will also implicitly pass the arguments of the current subroutine to the one called and using amp with parentheses will bypass prototypes Calling a subroutine Parentheses are required here if the subroutine is defined later in the code foo amp foo this also works but has other consequences regarding arguments passed to the subroutine Defining a subroutine sub foo foo Here parentheses are not required A list of arguments may be provided after the subroutine name Arguments may be scalars lists or hashes foo x y z The parameters to a subroutine do not need to be declared as to either number or type in fact they may vary from call to call Any validation of parameters must be performed explicitly inside the subroutine Arrays are expanded to their elements hashes are expanded to a list of key value pairs and the whole lot is passed into the subroutine as one flat list of scalars Whatever arguments are passed are available to the subroutine in the special array The elements of are references to the actual arguments changing an element of changes the corresponding argument Elements of may be accessed by subscripting it in the usual way 0 1 However the resulting code can be difficult to read and the parameters have pass by reference semantics which may be undesirable One common idiom is to assign to a list of named variables my x y z This provides mnemonic parameter names and implements pass by value semantics The my keyword indicates that the following variables are lexically scoped to the containing block Another idiom is to shift parameters off of This is especially common when the subroutine takes only one argument or for handling the self argument in object oriented modules my x shift Subroutines may assign to a hash to simulate named arguments this is recommended in Perl Best Practices for subroutines that are likely to ever have more than three parameters 7 sub function1 my args print x argument was args x n function1 x gt 23 Subroutines may return values return 42 x y z If the subroutine does not exit via a return statement it returns the last expression evaluated within the subroutine body Arrays and hashes in the return value are expanded to lists of scalars just as they are for arguments The returned expression is evaluated in the calling context of the subroutine this can surprise the unwary sub list 4 5 6 sub array x 4 5 6 x x list returns 6 last element of list x array returns 3 number of elements in list x list returns 4 5 6 x array returns 4 5 6 A subroutine can discover its calling context with the wantarray function sub either return wantarray 1 2 Oranges x either returns Oranges x either returns 1 2 Anonymous functions edit This section is an excerpt from Anonymous function Perl 5 edit Perl 5 supports anonymous functions 8 as follows sub print I got called n gt 1 fully anonymous called as created my squarer sub my x shift x x 2 assigned to a variable sub curry my sub args return sub sub gt args 3 as a return value of another function example of currying in Perl programming sub sum my tot 0 tot for tot returns the sum of its arguments my curried curry amp sum 5 7 9 print curried gt 1 2 3 n prints 27 5 7 9 1 2 3 Other constructs take bare blocks as arguments which serve a function similar to lambda functions of one parameter but do not have the same parameter passing convention as functions is not set my squares map 1 10 map and grep don t use the sub keyword my square2 map 1 10 braces unneeded for one expression my bad example map print for 1 10 values not passed like normal Perl functionRegular expressions editThe Perl language includes a specialized syntax for writing regular expressions RE or regexes and the interpreter contains an engine for matching strings to regular expressions The regular expression engine uses a backtracking algorithm extending its capabilities from simple pattern matching to string capture and substitution The regular expression engine is derived from regex written by Henry Spencer The Perl regular expression syntax was originally taken from Unix Version 8 regular expressions However it diverged before the first release of Perl and has since grown to include far more features Many other languages and applications are now adopting Perl Compatible Regular Expressions over POSIX regular expressions such as PHP Ruby Java Microsoft s NET Framework 9 and the Apache HTTP server Regular expression syntax is extremely compact owing to history The first regular expression dialects were only slightly more expressive than globs and the syntax was designed so that an expression would resemble the text that it matches citation needed This meant using no more than a single punctuation character or a pair of delimiting characters to express the few supported assertions Over time the expressiveness of regular expressions grew tremendously but the syntax design was never revised and continues to rely on punctuation As a result regular expressions can be cryptic and extremely dense Uses edit The m match operator introduces a regular expression match If it is delimited by slashes as in all of the examples here the leading m may be omitted for brevity If the m is present as in all of the following examples other delimiters can be used in place of slashes In the simplest case an expression such as x abc evaluates to true if and only if the string x matches the regular expression abc The s substitute operator on the other hand specifies a search and replace operation x s abc aBc upcase the b Another use of regular expressions is to specify delimiters for the split function words split line The split function creates a list of the parts of the string that are separated by what matches the regular expression In this example a line is divided into a list of its own comma separated parts and this list is then assigned to the words array Syntax edit Modifiers edit Perl regular expressions can take modifiers These are single letter suffixes that modify the meaning of the expression x abc i case insensitive pattern match x s abc aBc g global search and replace Because the compact syntax of regular expressions can make them dense and cryptic the x modifier was added in Perl to help programmers write more legible regular expressions It allows programmers to place whitespace and comments inside regular expressions x a match a followed by any character c then followed by the c character x Capturing edit Portions of a regular expression may be enclosed in parentheses corresponding portions of a matching string are captured Captured strings are assigned to the sequential built in variables 1 2 3 and a list of captured strings is returned as the value of the match x a c capture the character between a and c Captured strings 1 2 3 can be used later in the code Perl regular expressions also allow built in or user defined functions to apply to the captured match by using the e modifier x Oranges x s ge uc 1 e OranGEs x 1 append x with the contents of the match in the previous statement OranGEsgeObjects editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it March 2010 There are many ways to write object oriented code in Perl The most basic is using blessed references This works by identifying a reference of any type as belonging to a given package and the package provides the methods for the blessed reference For example a two dimensional point could be defined this way sub Point new Here Point gt new 4 5 will result in class being Point It s a variable to support subclassing see the perloop manpage my class x y bless x y class Implicit return sub Point distance my self from my dx dy self 0 from 0 self 1 from 1 sqrt dx dx dy dy This class can be used by invoking new to construct instances and invoking distance on those instances my p1 Point gt new 3 4 my p2 Point gt new 0 0 print p1 gt distance p2 Prints 5 Many modern Perl applications use the Moose object system citation needed Moose is built on top of Class MOP a meta object protocol providing complete introspection for all Moose using classes Thus you can ask classes about their attributes parents children methods etc using a simple API Moose classes A class has zero or more attributes A class has zero or more methods A class has zero or more superclasses aka parent classes A class inherits from its superclass es A class does zero or more roles which add the ability to add pre defined functionality to classes without subclassing A class has a constructor and a destructor A class has a metaclass A class has zero or more method modifiers These modifiers can apply to its own methods methods that are inherited from its ancestors or methods that are provided by roles Moose roles A role is something that a class does somewhat like mixins or interfaces in other object oriented programming languages Unlike mixins and interfaces roles can be applied to individual object instances A role has zero or more attributes A role has zero or more methods A role has zero or more method modifiers A role has zero or more required methods Examples edit An example of a class written using the MooseX Declare 10 extension to Moose use MooseX Declare class Point3D extends Point has z gt isa gt Num is gt rw after clear self gt z 0 method set to Num x Num y Num z self gt x x self gt y y self gt z z This is a class named Point3D that extends another class named Point explained in Moose examples It adds to its base class a new attribute z redefines the method set to and extends the method clear References edit Orwant Jon 2003 Games diversions and Perl culture best of the Perl journal ISBN 978 0 596 00312 8 CPAN front page Retrieved 2011 12 09 Features Perldoc Perl org Retrieved 24 July 2017 perlrun perldoc perl org Official documentation for the Perl programming language Retrieved 2011 01 08 Wainwright Peter 2005 Pro Perl Pro to Expert Series Apress p 64 ISBN 978 1 59059 438 4 Retrieved 2010 08 03 a string without quotes known as a bareword string using switch Damian Conway Perl Best Practices Archived 2011 09 18 at the Wayback Machine p 182 perlsub Perl subroutines Perldoc Browser perldoc perl org Retrieved 2020 11 24 Microsoft Corp NET Framework Regular Expressions NET Framework Developer s Guide 1 MooseX Declare documentationExternal links editPerl tutorials Learn Perl in about 2 hours 30 minutes PerlMonks A community committed to sharing Perl knowledge and coding tips Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Perl language structure amp oldid 1208394503, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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