Recipe 1.3 Exchanging Values Without Using Temporary Variables

1.3.1 Problem

You want to exchange the values of two scalar variables, but don't want to use a temporary variable.

1.3.2 Solution

Use list assignment to reorder the variables.

($VAR1, $VAR2) = ($VAR2, $VAR1);

1.3.3 Discussion

Most programming languages require an intermediate step when swapping two variables' values:

$temp    = $a; $a       = $b; $b       = $temp;

Not so in Perl. It tracks both sides of the assignment, guaranteeing that you don't accidentally clobber any of your values. This eliminates the temporary variable:

$a       = "alpha"; $b       = "omega"; ($a, $b) = ($b, $a);        # the first shall be last -- and versa vice

You can even exchange more than two variables at once:

($alpha, $beta, $production) = qw(January March August); # move beta       to alpha, # move production to beta, # move alpha      to production ($alpha, $beta, $production) = ($beta, $production, $alpha);

When this code finishes, $alpha, $beta, and $production have the values "March", "August", and "January".

1.3.4 See Also

The section on "List value constructors" in perldata(1) and on "List Values and Arrays" in Chapter 2 of Programming Perl



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

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