Recipe 5.10 Sorting a Hash

5.10.1 Problem

You need to work with the elements of a hash in a particular order.

5.10.2 Solution

Use keys to get a list of keys, then sort them based on the ordering you want:

# %hash is the hash to sort @keys = sort { criterion( ) } (keys %hash); foreach $key (@keys) {     $value = $hash{$key};     # do something with $key, $value }

5.10.3 Discussion

Even though you can't directly maintain a hash in a specific order (unless you use the Tie::IxHash module mentioned in Recipe 5.7), you can access its entries in any order.

This technique offers many variations on the same basic mechanism: you extract the keys, reorder them using the sort function, and then process the entries in the new order. All the sorting tricks shown in Chapter 4 can be used here. Let's look at some applications.

The following code simply uses sort to order the keys alphabetically:

foreach $food (sort keys %food_color) {     print "$food is $food_color{$food}.\n"; }

This sorts the keys by their associated values:

foreach $food (sort { $food_color{$a} cmp $food_color{$b} }                 keys %food_color) {     print "$food is $food_color{$food}.\n"; }

This sorts by length of the values:

@foods = sort {           length($food_color{$a}) <=> length($food_color{$b})          } keys %food_color; foreach $food (@foods) {     print "$food is $food_color{$food}.\n"; }

5.10.4 See Also

The sort and keys functions in perlfunc(1) and in Chapter 29 of Programming Perl; Recipe 5.7; we discuss sorting lists in Recipe 4.16



Perl Cookbook
Perl Cookbook, Second Edition
ISBN: 0596003137
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2003
Pages: 501

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