1PERLREF(1) Perl Programmers Reference Guide PERLREF(1)
2
3
4
6 perlref - Perl references and nested data structures
7
9 This is complete documentation about all aspects of references. For a
10 shorter, tutorial introduction to just the essential features, see
11 perlreftut.
12
14 Before release 5 of Perl it was difficult to represent complex data
15 structures, because all references had to be symbolic--and even then it
16 was difficult to refer to a variable instead of a symbol table entry.
17 Perl now not only makes it easier to use symbolic references to
18 variables, but also lets you have "hard" references to any piece of
19 data or code. Any scalar may hold a hard reference. Because arrays
20 and hashes contain scalars, you can now easily build arrays of arrays,
21 arrays of hashes, hashes of arrays, arrays of hashes of functions, and
22 so on.
23
24 Hard references are smart--they keep track of reference counts for you,
25 automatically freeing the thing referred to when its reference count
26 goes to zero. (Reference counts for values in self-referential or
27 cyclic data structures may not go to zero without a little help; see
28 "Circular References" for a detailed explanation.) If that thing
29 happens to be an object, the object is destructed. See perlobj for
30 more about objects. (In a sense, everything in Perl is an object, but
31 we usually reserve the word for references to objects that have been
32 officially "blessed" into a class package.)
33
34 Symbolic references are names of variables or other objects, just as a
35 symbolic link in a Unix filesystem contains merely the name of a file.
36 The *glob notation is something of a symbolic reference. (Symbolic
37 references are sometimes called "soft references", but please don't
38 call them that; references are confusing enough without useless
39 synonyms.)
40
41 In contrast, hard references are more like hard links in a Unix file
42 system: They are used to access an underlying object without concern
43 for what its (other) name is. When the word "reference" is used
44 without an adjective, as in the following paragraph, it is usually
45 talking about a hard reference.
46
47 References are easy to use in Perl. There is just one overriding
48 principle: in general, Perl does no implicit referencing or
49 dereferencing. When a scalar is holding a reference, it always behaves
50 as a simple scalar. It doesn't magically start being an array or hash
51 or subroutine; you have to tell it explicitly to do so, by
52 dereferencing it.
53
54 Making References
55 References can be created in several ways.
56
57 1. By using the backslash operator on a variable, subroutine, or
58 value. (This works much like the & (address-of) operator in C.)
59 This typically creates another reference to a variable, because
60 there's already a reference to the variable in the symbol table.
61 But the symbol table reference might go away, and you'll still have
62 the reference that the backslash returned. Here are some examples:
63
64 $scalarref = \$foo;
65 $arrayref = \@ARGV;
66 $hashref = \%ENV;
67 $coderef = \&handler;
68 $globref = \*foo;
69
70 It isn't possible to create a true reference to an IO handle
71 (filehandle or dirhandle) using the backslash operator. The most
72 you can get is a reference to a typeglob, which is actually a
73 complete symbol table entry. But see the explanation of the
74 *foo{THING} syntax below. However, you can still use type globs
75 and globrefs as though they were IO handles.
76
77 2. A reference to an anonymous array can be created using square
78 brackets:
79
80 $arrayref = [1, 2, ['a', 'b', 'c']];
81
82 Here we've created a reference to an anonymous array of three
83 elements whose final element is itself a reference to another
84 anonymous array of three elements. (The multidimensional syntax
85 described later can be used to access this. For example, after the
86 above, "$arrayref->[2][1]" would have the value "b".)
87
88 Taking a reference to an enumerated list is not the same as using
89 square brackets--instead it's the same as creating a list of
90 references!
91
92 @list = (\$a, \@b, \%c);
93 @list = \($a, @b, %c); # same thing!
94
95 As a special case, "\(@foo)" returns a list of references to the
96 contents of @foo, not a reference to @foo itself. Likewise for
97 %foo, except that the key references are to copies (since the keys
98 are just strings rather than full-fledged scalars).
99
100 3. A reference to an anonymous hash can be created using curly
101 brackets:
102
103 $hashref = {
104 'Adam' => 'Eve',
105 'Clyde' => 'Bonnie',
106 };
107
108 Anonymous hash and array composers like these can be intermixed
109 freely to produce as complicated a structure as you want. The
110 multidimensional syntax described below works for these too. The
111 values above are literals, but variables and expressions would work
112 just as well, because assignment operators in Perl (even within
113 local() or my()) are executable statements, not compile-time
114 declarations.
115
116 Because curly brackets (braces) are used for several other things
117 including BLOCKs, you may occasionally have to disambiguate braces
118 at the beginning of a statement by putting a "+" or a "return" in
119 front so that Perl realizes the opening brace isn't starting a
120 BLOCK. The economy and mnemonic value of using curlies is deemed
121 worth this occasional extra hassle.
122
123 For example, if you wanted a function to make a new hash and return
124 a reference to it, you have these options:
125
126 sub hashem { { @_ } } # silently wrong
127 sub hashem { +{ @_ } } # ok
128 sub hashem { return { @_ } } # ok
129
130 On the other hand, if you want the other meaning, you can do this:
131
132 sub showem { { @_ } } # ambiguous (currently ok,
133 # but may change)
134 sub showem { {; @_ } } # ok
135 sub showem { { return @_ } } # ok
136
137 The leading "+{" and "{;" always serve to disambiguate the
138 expression to mean either the HASH reference, or the BLOCK.
139
140 4. A reference to an anonymous subroutine can be created by using
141 "sub" without a subname:
142
143 $coderef = sub { print "Boink!\n" };
144
145 Note the semicolon. Except for the code inside not being
146 immediately executed, a "sub {}" is not so much a declaration as it
147 is an operator, like "do{}" or "eval{}". (However, no matter how
148 many times you execute that particular line (unless you're in an
149 "eval("...")"), $coderef will still have a reference to the same
150 anonymous subroutine.)
151
152 Anonymous subroutines act as closures with respect to my()
153 variables, that is, variables lexically visible within the current
154 scope. Closure is a notion out of the Lisp world that says if you
155 define an anonymous function in a particular lexical context, it
156 pretends to run in that context even when it's called outside the
157 context.
158
159 In human terms, it's a funny way of passing arguments to a
160 subroutine when you define it as well as when you call it. It's
161 useful for setting up little bits of code to run later, such as
162 callbacks. You can even do object-oriented stuff with it, though
163 Perl already provides a different mechanism to do that--see
164 perlobj.
165
166 You might also think of closure as a way to write a subroutine
167 template without using eval(). Here's a small example of how
168 closures work:
169
170 sub newprint {
171 my $x = shift;
172 return sub { my $y = shift; print "$x, $y!\n"; };
173 }
174 $h = newprint("Howdy");
175 $g = newprint("Greetings");
176
177 # Time passes...
178
179 &$h("world");
180 &$g("earthlings");
181
182 This prints
183
184 Howdy, world!
185 Greetings, earthlings!
186
187 Note particularly that $x continues to refer to the value passed
188 into newprint() despite "my $x" having gone out of scope by the
189 time the anonymous subroutine runs. That's what a closure is all
190 about.
191
192 This applies only to lexical variables, by the way. Dynamic
193 variables continue to work as they have always worked. Closure is
194 not something that most Perl programmers need trouble themselves
195 about to begin with.
196
197 5. References are often returned by special subroutines called
198 constructors. Perl objects are just references to a special type
199 of object that happens to know which package it's associated with.
200 Constructors are just special subroutines that know how to create
201 that association. They do so by starting with an ordinary
202 reference, and it remains an ordinary reference even while it's
203 also being an object. Constructors are often named "new()". You
204 can call them indirectly:
205
206 $objref = new Doggie( Tail => 'short', Ears => 'long' );
207
208 But that can produce ambiguous syntax in certain cases, so it's
209 often better to use the direct method invocation approach:
210
211 $objref = Doggie->new(Tail => 'short', Ears => 'long');
212
213 use Term::Cap;
214 $terminal = Term::Cap->Tgetent( { OSPEED => 9600 });
215
216 use Tk;
217 $main = MainWindow->new();
218 $menubar = $main->Frame(-relief => "raised",
219 -borderwidth => 2)
220
221 6. References of the appropriate type can spring into existence if you
222 dereference them in a context that assumes they exist. Because we
223 haven't talked about dereferencing yet, we can't show you any
224 examples yet.
225
226 7. A reference can be created by using a special syntax, lovingly
227 known as the *foo{THING} syntax. *foo{THING} returns a reference
228 to the THING slot in *foo (which is the symbol table entry which
229 holds everything known as foo).
230
231 $scalarref = *foo{SCALAR};
232 $arrayref = *ARGV{ARRAY};
233 $hashref = *ENV{HASH};
234 $coderef = *handler{CODE};
235 $ioref = *STDIN{IO};
236 $globref = *foo{GLOB};
237 $formatref = *foo{FORMAT};
238 $globname = *foo{NAME}; # "foo"
239 $pkgname = *foo{PACKAGE}; # "main"
240
241 Most of these are self-explanatory, but *foo{IO} deserves special
242 attention. It returns the IO handle, used for file handles ("open"
243 in perlfunc), sockets ("socket" in perlfunc and "socketpair" in
244 perlfunc), and directory handles ("opendir" in perlfunc). For
245 compatibility with previous versions of Perl, *foo{FILEHANDLE} is a
246 synonym for *foo{IO}, though it is discouraged, to encourage a
247 consistent use of one name: IO. On perls between v5.8 and v5.22,
248 it will issue a deprecation warning, but this deprecation has since
249 been rescinded.
250
251 *foo{THING} returns undef if that particular THING hasn't been used
252 yet, except in the case of scalars. *foo{SCALAR} returns a
253 reference to an anonymous scalar if $foo hasn't been used yet.
254 This might change in a future release.
255
256 *foo{NAME} and *foo{PACKAGE} are the exception, in that they return
257 strings, rather than references. These return the package and name
258 of the typeglob itself, rather than one that has been assigned to
259 it. So, after "*foo=*Foo::bar", *foo will become "*Foo::bar" when
260 used as a string, but *foo{PACKAGE} and *foo{NAME} will continue to
261 produce "main" and "foo", respectively.
262
263 *foo{IO} is an alternative to the *HANDLE mechanism given in
264 "Typeglobs and Filehandles" in perldata for passing filehandles
265 into or out of subroutines, or storing into larger data structures.
266 Its disadvantage is that it won't create a new filehandle for you.
267 Its advantage is that you have less risk of clobbering more than
268 you want to with a typeglob assignment. (It still conflates file
269 and directory handles, though.) However, if you assign the
270 incoming value to a scalar instead of a typeglob as we do in the
271 examples below, there's no risk of that happening.
272
273 splutter(*STDOUT); # pass the whole glob
274 splutter(*STDOUT{IO}); # pass both file and dir handles
275
276 sub splutter {
277 my $fh = shift;
278 print $fh "her um well a hmmm\n";
279 }
280
281 $rec = get_rec(*STDIN); # pass the whole glob
282 $rec = get_rec(*STDIN{IO}); # pass both file and dir handles
283
284 sub get_rec {
285 my $fh = shift;
286 return scalar <$fh>;
287 }
288
289 Using References
290 That's it for creating references. By now you're probably dying to
291 know how to use references to get back to your long-lost data. There
292 are several basic methods.
293
294 1. Anywhere you'd put an identifier (or chain of identifiers) as part
295 of a variable or subroutine name, you can replace the identifier
296 with a simple scalar variable containing a reference of the correct
297 type:
298
299 $bar = $$scalarref;
300 push(@$arrayref, $filename);
301 $$arrayref[0] = "January";
302 $$hashref{"KEY"} = "VALUE";
303 &$coderef(1,2,3);
304 print $globref "output\n";
305
306 It's important to understand that we are specifically not
307 dereferencing $arrayref[0] or $hashref{"KEY"} there. The
308 dereference of the scalar variable happens before it does any key
309 lookups. Anything more complicated than a simple scalar variable
310 must use methods 2 or 3 below. However, a "simple scalar" includes
311 an identifier that itself uses method 1 recursively. Therefore,
312 the following prints "howdy".
313
314 $refrefref = \\\"howdy";
315 print $$$$refrefref;
316
317 2. Anywhere you'd put an identifier (or chain of identifiers) as part
318 of a variable or subroutine name, you can replace the identifier
319 with a BLOCK returning a reference of the correct type. In other
320 words, the previous examples could be written like this:
321
322 $bar = ${$scalarref};
323 push(@{$arrayref}, $filename);
324 ${$arrayref}[0] = "January";
325 ${$hashref}{"KEY"} = "VALUE";
326 &{$coderef}(1,2,3);
327 $globref->print("output\n"); # iff IO::Handle is loaded
328
329 Admittedly, it's a little silly to use the curlies in this case,
330 but the BLOCK can contain any arbitrary expression, in particular,
331 subscripted expressions:
332
333 &{ $dispatch{$index} }(1,2,3); # call correct routine
334
335 Because of being able to omit the curlies for the simple case of
336 $$x, people often make the mistake of viewing the dereferencing
337 symbols as proper operators, and wonder about their precedence. If
338 they were, though, you could use parentheses instead of braces.
339 That's not the case. Consider the difference below; case 0 is a
340 short-hand version of case 1, not case 2:
341
342 $$hashref{"KEY"} = "VALUE"; # CASE 0
343 ${$hashref}{"KEY"} = "VALUE"; # CASE 1
344 ${$hashref{"KEY"}} = "VALUE"; # CASE 2
345 ${$hashref->{"KEY"}} = "VALUE"; # CASE 3
346
347 Case 2 is also deceptive in that you're accessing a variable called
348 %hashref, not dereferencing through $hashref to the hash it's
349 presumably referencing. That would be case 3.
350
351 3. Subroutine calls and lookups of individual array elements arise
352 often enough that it gets cumbersome to use method 2. As a form of
353 syntactic sugar, the examples for method 2 may be written:
354
355 $arrayref->[0] = "January"; # Array element
356 $hashref->{"KEY"} = "VALUE"; # Hash element
357 $coderef->(1,2,3); # Subroutine call
358
359 The left side of the arrow can be any expression returning a
360 reference, including a previous dereference. Note that $array[$x]
361 is not the same thing as "$array->[$x]" here:
362
363 $array[$x]->{"foo"}->[0] = "January";
364
365 This is one of the cases we mentioned earlier in which references
366 could spring into existence when in an lvalue context. Before this
367 statement, $array[$x] may have been undefined. If so, it's
368 automatically defined with a hash reference so that we can look up
369 "{"foo"}" in it. Likewise "$array[$x]->{"foo"}" will automatically
370 get defined with an array reference so that we can look up "[0]" in
371 it. This process is called autovivification.
372
373 One more thing here. The arrow is optional between brackets
374 subscripts, so you can shrink the above down to
375
376 $array[$x]{"foo"}[0] = "January";
377
378 Which, in the degenerate case of using only ordinary arrays, gives
379 you multidimensional arrays just like C's:
380
381 $score[$x][$y][$z] += 42;
382
383 Well, okay, not entirely like C's arrays, actually. C doesn't know
384 how to grow its arrays on demand. Perl does.
385
386 4. If a reference happens to be a reference to an object, then there
387 are probably methods to access the things referred to, and you
388 should probably stick to those methods unless you're in the class
389 package that defines the object's methods. In other words, be
390 nice, and don't violate the object's encapsulation without a very
391 good reason. Perl does not enforce encapsulation. We are not
392 totalitarians here. We do expect some basic civility though.
393
394 Using a string or number as a reference produces a symbolic reference,
395 as explained above. Using a reference as a number produces an integer
396 representing its storage location in memory. The only useful thing to
397 be done with this is to compare two references numerically to see
398 whether they refer to the same location.
399
400 if ($ref1 == $ref2) { # cheap numeric compare of references
401 print "refs 1 and 2 refer to the same thing\n";
402 }
403
404 Using a reference as a string produces both its referent's type,
405 including any package blessing as described in perlobj, as well as the
406 numeric address expressed in hex. The ref() operator returns just the
407 type of thing the reference is pointing to, without the address. See
408 "ref" in perlfunc for details and examples of its use.
409
410 The bless() operator may be used to associate the object a reference
411 points to with a package functioning as an object class. See perlobj.
412
413 A typeglob may be dereferenced the same way a reference can, because
414 the dereference syntax always indicates the type of reference desired.
415 So "${*foo}" and "${\$foo}" both indicate the same scalar variable.
416
417 Here's a trick for interpolating a subroutine call into a string:
418
419 print "My sub returned @{[mysub(1,2,3)]} that time.\n";
420
421 The way it works is that when the "@{...}" is seen in the double-quoted
422 string, it's evaluated as a block. The block creates a reference to an
423 anonymous array containing the results of the call to "mysub(1,2,3)".
424 So the whole block returns a reference to an array, which is then
425 dereferenced by "@{...}" and stuck into the double-quoted string. This
426 chicanery is also useful for arbitrary expressions:
427
428 print "That yields @{[$n + 5]} widgets\n";
429
430 Similarly, an expression that returns a reference to a scalar can be
431 dereferenced via "${...}". Thus, the above expression may be written
432 as:
433
434 print "That yields ${\($n + 5)} widgets\n";
435
436 Circular References
437 It is possible to create a "circular reference" in Perl, which can lead
438 to memory leaks. A circular reference occurs when two references
439 contain a reference to each other, like this:
440
441 my $foo = {};
442 my $bar = { foo => $foo };
443 $foo->{bar} = $bar;
444
445 You can also create a circular reference with a single variable:
446
447 my $foo;
448 $foo = \$foo;
449
450 In this case, the reference count for the variables will never reach 0,
451 and the references will never be garbage-collected. This can lead to
452 memory leaks.
453
454 Because objects in Perl are implemented as references, it's possible to
455 have circular references with objects as well. Imagine a TreeNode class
456 where each node references its parent and child nodes. Any node with a
457 parent will be part of a circular reference.
458
459 You can break circular references by creating a "weak reference". A
460 weak reference does not increment the reference count for a variable,
461 which means that the object can go out of scope and be destroyed. You
462 can weaken a reference with the "weaken" function exported by the
463 Scalar::Util module.
464
465 Here's how we can make the first example safer:
466
467 use Scalar::Util 'weaken';
468
469 my $foo = {};
470 my $bar = { foo => $foo };
471 $foo->{bar} = $bar;
472
473 weaken $foo->{bar};
474
475 The reference from $foo to $bar has been weakened. When the $bar
476 variable goes out of scope, it will be garbage-collected. The next time
477 you look at the value of the "$foo->{bar}" key, it will be "undef".
478
479 This action at a distance can be confusing, so you should be careful
480 with your use of weaken. You should weaken the reference in the
481 variable that will go out of scope first. That way, the longer-lived
482 variable will contain the expected reference until it goes out of
483 scope.
484
485 Symbolic references
486 We said that references spring into existence as necessary if they are
487 undefined, but we didn't say what happens if a value used as a
488 reference is already defined, but isn't a hard reference. If you use
489 it as a reference, it'll be treated as a symbolic reference. That is,
490 the value of the scalar is taken to be the name of a variable, rather
491 than a direct link to a (possibly) anonymous value.
492
493 People frequently expect it to work like this. So it does.
494
495 $name = "foo";
496 $$name = 1; # Sets $foo
497 ${$name} = 2; # Sets $foo
498 ${$name x 2} = 3; # Sets $foofoo
499 $name->[0] = 4; # Sets $foo[0]
500 @$name = (); # Clears @foo
501 &$name(); # Calls &foo()
502 $pack = "THAT";
503 ${"${pack}::$name"} = 5; # Sets $THAT::foo without eval
504
505 This is powerful, and slightly dangerous, in that it's possible to
506 intend (with the utmost sincerity) to use a hard reference, and
507 accidentally use a symbolic reference instead. To protect against
508 that, you can say
509
510 use strict 'refs';
511
512 and then only hard references will be allowed for the rest of the
513 enclosing block. An inner block may countermand that with
514
515 no strict 'refs';
516
517 Only package variables (globals, even if localized) are visible to
518 symbolic references. Lexical variables (declared with my()) aren't in
519 a symbol table, and thus are invisible to this mechanism. For example:
520
521 local $value = 10;
522 $ref = "value";
523 {
524 my $value = 20;
525 print $$ref;
526 }
527
528 This will still print 10, not 20. Remember that local() affects
529 package variables, which are all "global" to the package.
530
531 Not-so-symbolic references
532 Brackets around a symbolic reference can simply serve to isolate an
533 identifier or variable name from the rest of an expression, just as
534 they always have within a string. For example,
535
536 $push = "pop on ";
537 print "${push}over";
538
539 has always meant to print "pop on over", even though push is a reserved
540 word. This is generalized to work the same without the enclosing
541 double quotes, so that
542
543 print ${push} . "over";
544
545 and even
546
547 print ${ push } . "over";
548
549 will have the same effect. This construct is not considered to be a
550 symbolic reference when you're using strict refs:
551
552 use strict 'refs';
553 ${ bareword }; # Okay, means $bareword.
554 ${ "bareword" }; # Error, symbolic reference.
555
556 Similarly, because of all the subscripting that is done using single
557 words, the same rule applies to any bareword that is used for
558 subscripting a hash. So now, instead of writing
559
560 $array{ "aaa" }{ "bbb" }{ "ccc" }
561
562 you can write just
563
564 $array{ aaa }{ bbb }{ ccc }
565
566 and not worry about whether the subscripts are reserved words. In the
567 rare event that you do wish to do something like
568
569 $array{ shift }
570
571 you can force interpretation as a reserved word by adding anything that
572 makes it more than a bareword:
573
574 $array{ shift() }
575 $array{ +shift }
576 $array{ shift @_ }
577
578 The "use warnings" pragma or the -w switch will warn you if it
579 interprets a reserved word as a string. But it will no longer warn you
580 about using lowercase words, because the string is effectively quoted.
581
582 Pseudo-hashes: Using an array as a hash
583 Pseudo-hashes have been removed from Perl. The 'fields' pragma remains
584 available.
585
586 Function Templates
587 As explained above, an anonymous function with access to the lexical
588 variables visible when that function was compiled, creates a closure.
589 It retains access to those variables even though it doesn't get run
590 until later, such as in a signal handler or a Tk callback.
591
592 Using a closure as a function template allows us to generate many
593 functions that act similarly. Suppose you wanted functions named after
594 the colors that generated HTML font changes for the various colors:
595
596 print "Be ", red("careful"), "with that ", green("light");
597
598 The red() and green() functions would be similar. To create these,
599 we'll assign a closure to a typeglob of the name of the function we're
600 trying to build.
601
602 @colors = qw(red blue green yellow orange purple violet);
603 for my $name (@colors) {
604 no strict 'refs'; # allow symbol table manipulation
605 *$name = *{uc $name} = sub { "<FONT COLOR='$name'>@_</FONT>" };
606 }
607
608 Now all those different functions appear to exist independently. You
609 can call red(), RED(), blue(), BLUE(), green(), etc. This technique
610 saves on both compile time and memory use, and is less error-prone as
611 well, since syntax checks happen at compile time. It's critical that
612 any variables in the anonymous subroutine be lexicals in order to
613 create a proper closure. That's the reasons for the "my" on the loop
614 iteration variable.
615
616 This is one of the only places where giving a prototype to a closure
617 makes much sense. If you wanted to impose scalar context on the
618 arguments of these functions (probably not a wise idea for this
619 particular example), you could have written it this way instead:
620
621 *$name = sub ($) { "<FONT COLOR='$name'>$_[0]</FONT>" };
622
623 However, since prototype checking happens at compile time, the
624 assignment above happens too late to be of much use. You could address
625 this by putting the whole loop of assignments within a BEGIN block,
626 forcing it to occur during compilation.
627
628 Access to lexicals that change over time--like those in the "for" loop
629 above, basically aliases to elements from the surrounding lexical
630 scopes-- only works with anonymous subs, not with named subroutines.
631 Generally said, named subroutines do not nest properly and should only
632 be declared in the main package scope.
633
634 This is because named subroutines are created at compile time so their
635 lexical variables get assigned to the parent lexicals from the first
636 execution of the parent block. If a parent scope is entered a second
637 time, its lexicals are created again, while the nested subs still
638 reference the old ones.
639
640 Anonymous subroutines get to capture each time you execute the "sub"
641 operator, as they are created on the fly. If you are accustomed to
642 using nested subroutines in other programming languages with their own
643 private variables, you'll have to work at it a bit in Perl. The
644 intuitive coding of this type of thing incurs mysterious warnings about
645 "will not stay shared" due to the reasons explained above. For
646 example, this won't work:
647
648 sub outer {
649 my $x = $_[0] + 35;
650 sub inner { return $x * 19 } # WRONG
651 return $x + inner();
652 }
653
654 A work-around is the following:
655
656 sub outer {
657 my $x = $_[0] + 35;
658 local *inner = sub { return $x * 19 };
659 return $x + inner();
660 }
661
662 Now inner() can only be called from within outer(), because of the
663 temporary assignments of the anonymous subroutine. But when it does, it
664 has normal access to the lexical variable $x from the scope of outer()
665 at the time outer is invoked.
666
667 This has the interesting effect of creating a function local to another
668 function, something not normally supported in Perl.
669
671 You may not (usefully) use a reference as the key to a hash. It will
672 be converted into a string:
673
674 $x{ \$a } = $a;
675
676 If you try to dereference the key, it won't do a hard dereference, and
677 you won't accomplish what you're attempting. You might want to do
678 something more like
679
680 $r = \@a;
681 $x{ $r } = $r;
682
683 And then at least you can use the values(), which will be real refs,
684 instead of the keys(), which won't.
685
686 The standard Tie::RefHash module provides a convenient workaround to
687 this.
688
689 Postfix Dereference Syntax
690 Beginning in v5.20.0, a postfix syntax for using references is
691 available. It behaves as described in "Using References", but instead
692 of a prefixed sigil, a postfixed sigil-and-star is used.
693
694 For example:
695
696 $r = \@a;
697 @b = $r->@*; # equivalent to @$r or @{ $r }
698
699 $r = [ 1, [ 2, 3 ], 4 ];
700 $r->[1]->@*; # equivalent to @{ $r->[1] }
701
702 In Perl 5.20 and 5.22, this syntax must be enabled with "use feature
703 'postderef'". As of Perl 5.24, no feature declarations are required to
704 make it available.
705
706 Postfix dereference should work in all circumstances where block
707 (circumfix) dereference worked, and should be entirely equivalent.
708 This syntax allows dereferencing to be written and read entirely left-
709 to-right. The following equivalencies are defined:
710
711 $sref->$*; # same as ${ $sref }
712 $aref->@*; # same as @{ $aref }
713 $aref->$#*; # same as $#{ $aref }
714 $href->%*; # same as %{ $href }
715 $cref->&*; # same as &{ $cref }
716 $gref->**; # same as *{ $gref }
717
718 Note especially that "$cref->&*" is not equivalent to "$cref->()", and
719 can serve different purposes.
720
721 Glob elements can be extracted through the postfix dereferencing
722 feature:
723
724 $gref->*{SCALAR}; # same as *{ $gref }{SCALAR}
725
726 Postfix array and scalar dereferencing can be used in interpolating
727 strings (double quotes or the "qq" operator), but only if the
728 "postderef_qq" feature is enabled.
729
730 Postfix Reference Slicing
731 Value slices of arrays and hashes may also be taken with postfix
732 dereferencing notation, with the following equivalencies:
733
734 $aref->@[ ... ]; # same as @$aref[ ... ]
735 $href->@{ ... }; # same as @$href{ ... }
736
737 Postfix key/value pair slicing, added in 5.20.0 and documented in the
738 Key/Value Hash Slices section of perldata, also behaves as expected:
739
740 $aref->%[ ... ]; # same as %$aref[ ... ]
741 $href->%{ ... }; # same as %$href{ ... }
742
743 As with postfix array, postfix value slice dereferencing can be used in
744 interpolating strings (double quotes or the "qq" operator), but only if
745 the "postderef_qq" feature is enabled.
746
747 Assigning to References
748 Beginning in v5.22.0, the referencing operator can be assigned to. It
749 performs an aliasing operation, so that the variable name referenced on
750 the left-hand side becomes an alias for the thing referenced on the
751 right-hand side:
752
753 \$a = \$b; # $a and $b now point to the same scalar
754 \&foo = \&bar; # foo() now means bar()
755
756 This syntax must be enabled with "use feature 'refaliasing'". It is
757 experimental, and will warn by default unless "no warnings
758 'experimental::refaliasing'" is in effect.
759
760 These forms may be assigned to, and cause the right-hand side to be
761 evaluated in scalar context:
762
763 \$scalar
764 \@array
765 \%hash
766 \&sub
767 \my $scalar
768 \my @array
769 \my %hash
770 \state $scalar # or @array, etc.
771 \our $scalar # etc.
772 \local $scalar # etc.
773 \local our $scalar # etc.
774 \$some_array[$index]
775 \$some_hash{$key}
776 \local $some_array[$index]
777 \local $some_hash{$key}
778 condition ? \$this : \$that[0] # etc.
779
780 Slicing operations and parentheses cause the right-hand side to be
781 evaluated in list context:
782
783 \@array[5..7]
784 (\@array[5..7])
785 \(@array[5..7])
786 \@hash{'foo','bar'}
787 (\@hash{'foo','bar'})
788 \(@hash{'foo','bar'})
789 (\$scalar)
790 \($scalar)
791 \(my $scalar)
792 \my($scalar)
793 (\@array)
794 (\%hash)
795 (\&sub)
796 \(&sub)
797 \($foo, @bar, %baz)
798 (\$foo, \@bar, \%baz)
799
800 Each element on the right-hand side must be a reference to a datum of
801 the right type. Parentheses immediately surrounding an array (and
802 possibly also "my"/"state"/"our"/"local") will make each element of the
803 array an alias to the corresponding scalar referenced on the right-hand
804 side:
805
806 \(@a) = \(@b); # @a and @b now have the same elements
807 \my(@a) = \(@b); # likewise
808 \(my @a) = \(@b); # likewise
809 push @a, 3; # but now @a has an extra element that @b lacks
810 \(@a) = (\$a, \$b, \$c); # @a now contains $a, $b, and $c
811
812 Combining that form with "local" and putting parentheses immediately
813 around a hash are forbidden (because it is not clear what they should
814 do):
815
816 \local(@array) = foo(); # WRONG
817 \(%hash) = bar(); # WRONG
818
819 Assignment to references and non-references may be combined in lists
820 and conditional ternary expressions, as long as the values on the
821 right-hand side are the right type for each element on the left, though
822 this may make for obfuscated code:
823
824 (my $tom, \my $dick, \my @harry) = (\1, \2, [1..3]);
825 # $tom is now \1
826 # $dick is now 2 (read-only)
827 # @harry is (1,2,3)
828
829 my $type = ref $thingy;
830 ($type ? $type eq 'ARRAY' ? \@foo : \$bar : $baz) = $thingy;
831
832 The "foreach" loop can also take a reference constructor for its loop
833 variable, though the syntax is limited to one of the following, with an
834 optional "my", "state", or "our" after the backslash:
835
836 \$s
837 \@a
838 \%h
839 \&c
840
841 No parentheses are permitted. This feature is particularly useful for
842 arrays-of-arrays, or arrays-of-hashes:
843
844 foreach \my @a (@array_of_arrays) {
845 frobnicate($a[0], $a[-1]);
846 }
847
848 foreach \my %h (@array_of_hashes) {
849 $h{gelastic}++ if $h{type} eq 'funny';
850 }
851
852 CAVEAT: Aliasing does not work correctly with closures. If you try to
853 alias lexical variables from an inner subroutine or "eval", the
854 aliasing will only be visible within that inner sub, and will not
855 affect the outer subroutine where the variables are declared. This
856 bizarre behavior is subject to change.
857
859 Beginning in v5.26.0, the referencing operator can come after "my",
860 "state", "our", or "local". This syntax must be enabled with "use
861 feature 'declared_refs'". It is experimental, and will warn by default
862 unless "no warnings 'experimental::refaliasing'" is in effect.
863
864 This feature makes these:
865
866 my \$x;
867 our \$y;
868
869 equivalent to:
870
871 \my $x;
872 \our $x;
873
874 It is intended mainly for use in assignments to references (see
875 "Assigning to References", above). It also allows the backslash to be
876 used on just some items in a list of declared variables:
877
878 my ($foo, \@bar, \%baz); # equivalent to: my $foo, \my(@bar, %baz);
879
881 Besides the obvious documents, source code can be instructive. Some
882 pathological examples of the use of references can be found in the
883 t/op/ref.t regression test in the Perl source directory.
884
885 See also perldsc and perllol for how to use references to create
886 complex data structures, and perlootut and perlobj for how to use them
887 to create objects.
888
889
890
891perl v5.28.2 2018-11-01 PERLREF(1)