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1=head1 NAME
2
3perllol - Manipulating Arrays of Arrays in Perl
4
5=head1 DESCRIPTION
6
7=head2 Declaration and Access of Arrays of Arrays
8
9The simplest two-level data structure to build in Perl is an array of
10arrays, sometimes casually called a list of lists. It's reasonably easy to
11understand, and almost everything that applies here will also be applicable
12later on with the fancier data structures.
13
14An array of an array is just a regular old array @AoA that you can
15get at with two subscripts, like C<$AoA[3][2]>. Here's a declaration
16of the array:
17
18 use 5.010; # so we can use say()
19
20 # assign to our array, an array of array references
21 @AoA = (
22 [ "fred", "barney", "pebbles", "bambam", "dino", ],
23 [ "george", "jane", "elroy", "judy", ],
24 [ "homer", "bart", "marge", "maggie", ],
25 );
26 say $AoA[2][1];
27 bart
28
29Now you should be very careful that the outer bracket type
30is a round one, that is, a parenthesis. That's because you're assigning to
31an @array, so you need parentheses. If you wanted there I<not> to be an @AoA,
32but rather just a reference to it, you could do something more like this:
33
34 # assign a reference to array of array references
35 $ref_to_AoA = [
36 [ "fred", "barney", "pebbles", "bambam", "dino", ],
37 [ "george", "jane", "elroy", "judy", ],
38 [ "homer", "bart", "marge", "maggie", ],
39 ];
40 say $ref_to_AoA->[2][1];
41 bart
42
43Notice that the outer bracket type has changed, and so our access syntax
44has also changed. That's because unlike C, in perl you can't freely
45interchange arrays and references thereto. $ref_to_AoA is a reference to an
46array, whereas @AoA is an array proper. Likewise, C<$AoA[2]> is not an
47array, but an array ref. So how come you can write these:
48
49 $AoA[2][2]
50 $ref_to_AoA->[2][2]
51
52instead of having to write these:
53
54 $AoA[2]->[2]
55 $ref_to_AoA->[2]->[2]
56
57Well, that's because the rule is that on adjacent brackets only (whether
58square or curly), you are free to omit the pointer dereferencing arrow.
59But you cannot do so for the very first one if it's a scalar containing
60a reference, which means that $ref_to_AoA always needs it.
61
62=head2 Growing Your Own
63
64That's all well and good for declaration of a fixed data structure,
65but what if you wanted to add new elements on the fly, or build
66it up entirely from scratch?
67
68First, let's look at reading it in from a file. This is something like
69adding a row at a time. We'll assume that there's a flat file in which
70each line is a row and each word an element. If you're trying to develop an
71@AoA array containing all these, here's the right way to do that:
72
73 while (<>) {
74 @tmp = split;
75 push @AoA, [ @tmp ];
76 }
77
78You might also have loaded that from a function:
79
80 for $i ( 1 .. 10 ) {
81 $AoA[$i] = [ somefunc($i) ];
82 }
83
84Or you might have had a temporary variable sitting around with the
85array in it.
86
87 for $i ( 1 .. 10 ) {
88 @tmp = somefunc($i);
89 $AoA[$i] = [ @tmp ];
90 }
91
92It's important you make sure to use the C<[ ]> array reference
93constructor. That's because this wouldn't work:
94
95 $AoA[$i] = @tmp; # WRONG!
96
97The reason that doesn't do what you want is because assigning a
98named array like that to a scalar is taking an array in scalar
99context, which means just counts the number of elements in @tmp.
100
101If you are running under C<use strict> (and if you aren't, why in
102the world aren't you?), you'll have to add some declarations to
103make it happy:
104
105 use strict;
106 my(@AoA, @tmp);
107 while (<>) {
108 @tmp = split;
109 push @AoA, [ @tmp ];
110 }
111
112Of course, you don't need the temporary array to have a name at all:
113
114 while (<>) {
115 push @AoA, [ split ];
116 }
117
118You also don't have to use push(). You could just make a direct assignment
119if you knew where you wanted to put it:
120
121 my (@AoA, $i, $line);
122 for $i ( 0 .. 10 ) {
123 $line = <>;
124 $AoA[$i] = [ split " ", $line ];
125 }
126
127or even just
128
129 my (@AoA, $i);
130 for $i ( 0 .. 10 ) {
131 $AoA[$i] = [ split " ", <> ];
132 }
133
134You should in general be leery of using functions that could
135potentially return lists in scalar context without explicitly stating
136such. This would be clearer to the casual reader:
137
138 my (@AoA, $i);
139 for $i ( 0 .. 10 ) {
140 $AoA[$i] = [ split " ", scalar(<>) ];
141 }
142
143If you wanted to have a $ref_to_AoA variable as a reference to an array,
144you'd have to do something like this:
145
146 while (<>) {
147 push @$ref_to_AoA, [ split ];
148 }
149
150Now you can add new rows. What about adding new columns? If you're
151dealing with just matrices, it's often easiest to use simple assignment:
152
153 for $x (1 .. 10) {
154 for $y (1 .. 10) {
155 $AoA[$x][$y] = func($x, $y);
156 }
157 }
158
159 for $x ( 3, 7, 9 ) {
160 $AoA[$x][20] += func2($x);
161 }
162
163It doesn't matter whether those elements are already
164there or not: it'll gladly create them for you, setting
165intervening elements to C<undef> as need be.
166
167If you wanted just to append to a row, you'd have
168to do something a bit funnier looking:
169
170 # add new columns to an existing row
171 push @{ $AoA[0] }, "wilma", "betty"; # explicit deref
172
173=head2 Access and Printing
174
175Now it's time to print your data structure out. How
176are you going to do that? Well, if you want only one
177of the elements, it's trivial:
178
179 print $AoA[0][0];
180
181If you want to print the whole thing, though, you can't
182say
183
184 print @AoA; # WRONG
185
186because you'll get just references listed, and perl will never
187automatically dereference things for you. Instead, you have to
188roll yourself a loop or two. This prints the whole structure,
189using the shell-style for() construct to loop across the outer
190set of subscripts.
191
192 for $aref ( @AoA ) {
193 say "\t [ @$aref ],";
194 }
195
196If you wanted to keep track of subscripts, you might do this:
197
198 for $i ( 0 .. $#AoA ) {
199 say "\t elt $i is [ @{$AoA[$i]} ],";
200 }
201
202or maybe even this. Notice the inner loop.
203
204 for $i ( 0 .. $#AoA ) {
205 for $j ( 0 .. $#{$AoA[$i]} ) {
206 say "elt $i $j is $AoA[$i][$j]";
207 }
208 }
209
210As you can see, it's getting a bit complicated. That's why
211sometimes is easier to take a temporary on your way through:
212
213 for $i ( 0 .. $#AoA ) {
214 $aref = $AoA[$i];
215 for $j ( 0 .. $#{$aref} ) {
216 say "elt $i $j is $AoA[$i][$j]";
217 }
218 }
219
220Hmm... that's still a bit ugly. How about this:
221
222 for $i ( 0 .. $#AoA ) {
223 $aref = $AoA[$i];
224 $n = @$aref - 1;
225 for $j ( 0 .. $n ) {
226 say "elt $i $j is $AoA[$i][$j]";
227 }
228 }
229
230When you get tired of writing a custom print for your data structures,
231you might look at the standard L<Dumpvalue> or L<Data::Dumper> modules.
232The former is what the Perl debugger uses, while the latter generates
233parsable Perl code. For example:
234
235 use v5.14; # using the + prototype, new to v5.14
236
237 sub show(+) {
238 require Dumpvalue;
239 state $prettily = new Dumpvalue::
240 tick => q("),
241 compactDump => 1, # comment these two lines
242 # out
243 veryCompact => 1, # if you want a bigger
244 # dump
245 ;
246 dumpValue $prettily @_;
247 }
248
249 # Assign a list of array references to an array.
250 my @AoA = (
251 [ "fred", "barney" ],
252 [ "george", "jane", "elroy" ],
253 [ "homer", "marge", "bart" ],
254 );
255 push @{ $AoA[0] }, "wilma", "betty";
256 show @AoA;
257
258will print out:
259
260 0 0..3 "fred" "barney" "wilma" "betty"
261 1 0..2 "george" "jane" "elroy"
262 2 0..2 "homer" "marge" "bart"
263
264Whereas if you comment out the two lines I said you might wish to,
265then it shows it to you this way instead:
266
267 0 ARRAY(0x8031d0)
268 0 "fred"
269 1 "barney"
270 2 "wilma"
271 3 "betty"
272 1 ARRAY(0x803d40)
273 0 "george"
274 1 "jane"
275 2 "elroy"
276 2 ARRAY(0x803e10)
277 0 "homer"
278 1 "marge"
279 2 "bart"
280
281=head2 Slices
282
283If you want to get at a slice (part of a row) in a multidimensional
284array, you're going to have to do some fancy subscripting. That's
285because while we have a nice synonym for single elements via the
286pointer arrow for dereferencing, no such convenience exists for slices.
287
288Here's how to do one operation using a loop. We'll assume an @AoA
289variable as before.
290
291 @part = ();
292 $x = 4;
293 for ($y = 7; $y < 13; $y++) {
294 push @part, $AoA[$x][$y];
295 }
296
297That same loop could be replaced with a slice operation:
298
299 @part = @{$AoA[4]}[7..12];
300
301or spaced out a bit:
302
303 @part = @{ $AoA[4] } [ 7..12 ];
304
305But as you might well imagine, this can get pretty rough on the reader.
306
307Ah, but what if you wanted a I<two-dimensional slice>, such as having
308$x run from 4..8 and $y run from 7 to 12? Hmm... here's the simple way:
309
310 @newAoA = ();
311 for ($startx = $x = 4; $x <= 8; $x++) {
312 for ($starty = $y = 7; $y <= 12; $y++) {
313 $newAoA[$x - $startx][$y - $starty] = $AoA[$x][$y];
314 }
315 }
316
317We can reduce some of the looping through slices
318
319 for ($x = 4; $x <= 8; $x++) {
320 push @newAoA, [ @{ $AoA[$x] } [ 7..12 ] ];
321 }
322
323If you were into Schwartzian Transforms, you would probably
324have selected map for that
325
326 @newAoA = map { [ @{ $AoA[$_] } [ 7..12 ] ] } 4 .. 8;
327
328Although if your manager accused you of seeking job security (or rapid
329insecurity) through inscrutable code, it would be hard to argue. :-)
330If I were you, I'd put that in a function:
331
332 @newAoA = splice_2D( \@AoA, 4 => 8, 7 => 12 );
333 sub splice_2D {
334 my $lrr = shift; # ref to array of array refs!
335 my ($x_lo, $x_hi,
336 $y_lo, $y_hi) = @_;
337
338 return map {
339 [ @{ $lrr->[$_] } [ $y_lo .. $y_hi ] ]
340 } $x_lo .. $x_hi;
341 }
342
343
344=head1 SEE ALSO
345
346L<perldata>, L<perlref>, L<perldsc>
347
348=head1 AUTHOR
349
350Tom Christiansen <F<tchrist@perl.com>>
351
352Last update: Tue Apr 26 18:30:55 MDT 2011