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Perl Tutorial - 2 林光龍
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Memory Address (1/2) A number that is assigned to each byte in a computer’s memory that the CPU uses to track where data and instructions are stored in RAM. Each byte is assigned a memory address whether or not it is being used to store data. The computer’s CPU uses the address bus to communicate which memory address it wants to access, and the memory controller reads the address and then puts the data stored in that memory address back onto the address bus for the CPU to use.
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Memory Address (2/2) $b = 17; $a = \$b;
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$b[2] $b[1] $a @b $b[0] $c{“k3”} $c{“k2”} %c $c{“k1”} E015 E001 E013 E017 E033 E031 E035
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$b[2] $b[1] $a @b $b[0] $c{“k3”} $c{“k2”} %c $c{“k1”} E015 E001 E013 E017 E033 E031 E035 \$a \@a \%c
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Reference A reference is a scalar value that points to a memory location that holds some type of data. $a = 10; @b = (1, 2, 3); %c = ("k1" => "foo", "k2" => "bar"); $add_of_a = \$a; $add_of_b = \@b; $add_of_c = \%c; print <<"END"; The address of \$a is $add_of_a The address of \@b is $add_of_b The address of \%b is $add_of_c END
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Multi-Dimensional Array @array1 = ('20020701', 'Sending Mail in Perl', 'Philip Yuson'); @array2 = ('20020601', 'Manipulating Dates in Perl', 'Philip Yuson'); @array3 = ('20020501', 'GUI Application for CVS', 'Philip Yuson'); @main = (@array1, @array2, @array3); The result would be similar to this: @main = ('20020701', 'Sending Mail in Perl', 'Philip Yuson', '20020601', 'Manipulating Dates in Perl', 'Philip Yuson', '20020501', 'GUI Application for CVS', 'Philip Yuson');
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Multi-Dimensional Array Instead of pumping these into one list, you can put the references of these arrays in the list: @main = (\@array1, \@array2, \@array3); Or to simplify: @main = ( ['20020701', 'Sending Mail in Perl', 'Philip Yuson'], ['20020601', 'Manipulating Dates in Perl', 'Philip Yuson'], ['20020501', 'GUI Application for CVS', 'Philip Yuson']);
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To Get Value in Multi-Dimensional Array (1/2) To reference the first column of the first row: $ref = $main[0]; # set $ref to reference of @array1 $ref->[0]; # Returns the first item in @array To simplify: $main[0]->[0]; You can also simplify this as: $main[0][0]; To get the value of the second column of the third row: $ref = $main[2]; # Third row; $ref->[1]; # second column;
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To Get Value in Multi-Dimensional Array (2/2) use strict; my @john = (86, 77, 82, 90); my @paul = (88, 70, 92, 65); my @may = (71, 64, 68, 78); my @grades = (\@john, \@paul, \@may); for (my $row = 0; $row < $#grades+1; $row++) { for (my $col = 0; $col < $#{$grades[$row]}+1; $col++) { print $grades[$row][$col]. ", "; } print "\n"; }
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Associative Array (1/2) Scalar is the simplest Perl data type which was designed to hold only one thing like a number, a string or a reference. A list is an ordered collection of scalars. An array is a variable that contains a list. A hash is a data structure like an array, in that it can hold any number of values and retrieve these values at will. However, instead of indexing the values by number, as we did with arrays, we'll look up the values by name. That is, the indices (here, we'll call them keys) aren't numbers but are arbitrary unique strings
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Associative Array (2/2) 3 $x Dog $y 3 $a[2] 2 1 $a[1] $a[0] @a 188 $h{ "he" } Wall Larry $h{ “ln" } $h{ "fn" } %h
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Creating a Hash my %weekdays = ( 'Sun' => 'Sunday', 'Mon' => 'Monday', 'Tue' => 'Tuesday', 'Wed' => 'Wednesday', 'Thu' => 'Thursday', 'Fri' => 'Friday', 'Sat' => 'Saturday', ); my %month = ( 'January' => '01', 'February' => '02', 'March' => '03', 'April' => '04', 'May' => '05', 'June' => '06', 'July' => '07', 'August' => '08', 'September' => '09', 'October' => '10', 'November' => '11', 'December' => '12', );
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Hash Operation Retrieving a value from a hash. Adding new key/values to a hash. Changing the value of an existing hash key. Deleting a key/value from a hash. my $day_of_the_week = $weekdays{'Wed'}; delete $weekdays{'some'}; $weekdays{'some'} = 'someday';
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Hash Function keys(%hashname) values(%hashname) each(%hashname)
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17 Reference Perl Tutorial: Start, –http://www.comp.leeds.ac.uk/Perl/start.htmlhttp://www.comp.leeds.ac.uk/Perl/start.html –http://www.cyut.edu.tw/~hcchen/perl/Perl%20tutorial%20Start.ht m (Big5 Version)http://www.cyut.edu.tw/~hcchen/perl/Perl%20tutorial%20Start.ht m The perl.ogr Online Library, http://www.perl.org/books/library.html http://www.perl.org/books/library.html Beginning Perl – perl.org http://www.perl.org/books/beginning-perl/ http://www.perl.org/books/beginning-perl/ Perl For CGI tutorials http://www.developingwebs.net/perl/ http://www.developingwebs.net/perl/
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18 A. D. Marshall, Practical Perl Programming, 1999-2005, http://www.cs.cf.ac.uk/Dave/PERL/perl_caller.html http://www.cs.cf.ac.uk/Dave/PERL/perl_caller.html Simon Cozens, Ten Perl Myths, February 23, 2000, http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2000/01/10PerlMyths.html http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2000/01/10PerlMyths.html 簡信昌, Perl 學習手札全文, http://perl.hcchien.org/toc.html http://perl.hcchien.org/toc.html 朱孝國, Perl 筆記, http://irw.ncut.edu.tw/peterju/perl.html Perl 的安全性監測, http://www.linuxuser.com.tw/skill_detail.php?cid=869 http://www.linuxuser.com.tw/skill_detail.php?cid=869 Programmer's File Editor, http://www.lancs.ac.uk/staff/steveb/cpaap/pfe/default.htm http://www.lancs.ac.uk/staff/steveb/cpaap/pfe/default.htm The CPAN Search Site, http://search.cpan.org/http://search.cpan.org/ Regular Expression Tutorial, http://www.regular- expressions.info/tutorial.htmlhttp://www.regular- expressions.info/tutorial.html 18
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