ASPN ActiveState Programmer Network
  ActiveState
/ Home / Perl / PHP / Python / Tcl / XSLT /
/ Safari / My ASPN /
Cookbooks | Documentation | Mailing Lists | Modules | News Feeds | Products | User Groups | Web Services
SEARCH

Reference
ActivePerl 5.8
Modules
ActivePerl
ActiveState
Algorithm
AnyDBM File
Apache
Archive
Attribute
AutoLoader
AutoSplit
B
Benchmark
Bit
BSD
Bundle
ByteLoader
Carp
CGI
Class
Compress
Config
CORE
CPAN
Crypt
Cwd
Data
Date
DB
DBD
DBI
DBM Filter
DB File
Devel
Digest
DirHandle
Dumpvalue
DynaLoader
Encode
English
Env
Errno
Exporter
ExtUtils
Fatal
Fcntl
File
FileCache
FileHandle
Filter
FindBin
Font
GD
Getopt
Hash
HTML
HTTP
I18N
IO
IPC
JSON
List
Util
Locale
LWP
lwpcook
lwptut
Mac
MacPerl
Math
MD5
Memoize
MIME
MLDBM
Module
NDBM File
Net
NEXT
O
Opcode
Oraperl
perl5db
PerlEx
PerlIO
perllocal
Pod
POSIX
Roadmap
Safe
Scalar
SDBM File
Search
SelectSaver
SelfLoader
Shell
SOAP
Socket
SQL
Storable
Sub
Switch
Symbol
Sys
TASKS
Tcl
Term
Test
Text
Thread
Tie
Time
Tk
Tkx
UDDI
Unicode
UNIVERSAL
URI
User
Win32
Win32API
Win32CORE
WWW
XML
XMLRPC
XSLoader
YAML

MyASPN >> Reference >> ActivePerl 5.8 >> Modules
ActivePerl 5.8 documentation

NAME

List::Util - A selection of general-utility list subroutines


SYNOPSIS

    use List::Util qw(first max maxstr min minstr reduce shuffle sum);


DESCRIPTION

List::Util contains a selection of subroutines that people have expressed would be nice to have in the perl core, but the usage would not really be high enough to warrant the use of a keyword, and the size so small such that being individual extensions would be wasteful.

By default List::Util does not export any subroutines. The subroutines defined are

first BLOCK LIST

Similar to grep in that it evaluates BLOCK setting $_ to each element of LIST in turn. first returns the first element where the result from BLOCK is a true value. If BLOCK never returns true or LIST was empty then undef is returned.

    $foo = first { defined($_) } @list    # first defined value in @list
    $foo = first { $_ > $value } @list    # first value in @list which
                                          # is greater than $value

This function could be implemented using reduce like this

    $foo = reduce { defined($a) ? $a : wanted($b) ? $b : undef } undef, @list

for example wanted() could be defined() which would return the first defined value in @list

max LIST

Returns the entry in the list with the highest numerical value. If the list is empty then undef is returned.

    $foo = max 1..10                # 10
    $foo = max 3,9,12               # 12
    $foo = max @bar, @baz           # whatever

This function could be implemented using reduce like this

    $foo = reduce { $a > $b ? $a : $b } 1..10
maxstr LIST

Similar to max, but treats all the entries in the list as strings and returns the highest string as defined by the gt operator. If the list is empty then undef is returned.

    $foo = maxstr 'A'..'Z'          # 'Z'
    $foo = maxstr "hello","world"   # "world"
    $foo = maxstr @bar, @baz        # whatever

This function could be implemented using reduce like this

    $foo = reduce { $a gt $b ? $a : $b } 'A'..'Z'
min LIST

Similar to max but returns the entry in the list with the lowest numerical value. If the list is empty then undef is returned.

    $foo = min 1..10                # 1
    $foo = min 3,9,12               # 3
    $foo = min @bar, @baz           # whatever

This function could be implemented using reduce like this

    $foo = reduce { $a < $b ? $a : $b } 1..10
minstr LIST

Similar to min, but treats all the entries in the list as strings and returns the lowest string as defined by the lt operator. If the list is empty then undef is returned.

    $foo = minstr 'A'..'Z'          # 'A'
    $foo = minstr "hello","world"   # "hello"
    $foo = minstr @bar, @baz        # whatever

This function could be implemented using reduce like this

    $foo = reduce { $a lt $b ? $a : $b } 'A'..'Z'
reduce BLOCK LIST

Reduces LIST by calling BLOCK, in a scalar context, multiple times, setting $a and $b each time. The first call will be with $a and $b set to the first two elements of the list, subsequent calls will be done by setting $a to the result of the previous call and $b to the next element in the list.

Returns the result of the last call to BLOCK. If LIST is empty then undef is returned. If LIST only contains one element then that element is returned and BLOCK is not executed.

    $foo = reduce { $a < $b ? $a : $b } 1..10       # min
    $foo = reduce { $a lt $b ? $a : $b } 'aa'..'zz' # minstr
    $foo = reduce { $a + $b } 1 .. 10               # sum
    $foo = reduce { $a . $b } @bar                  # concat
shuffle LIST

Returns the elements of LIST in a random order

    @cards = shuffle 0..51      # 0..51 in a random order
sum LIST

Returns the sum of all the elements in LIST. If LIST is empty then undef is returned.

    $foo = sum 1..10                # 55
    $foo = sum 3,9,12               # 24
    $foo = sum @bar, @baz           # whatever

This function could be implemented using reduce like this

    $foo = reduce { $a + $b } 1..10


KNOWN BUGS

With perl versions prior to 5.005 there are some cases where reduce will return an incorrect result. This will show up as test 7 of reduce.t failing.


SUGGESTED ADDITIONS

The following are additions that have been requested, but I have been reluctant to add due to them being very simple to implement in perl

  # One argument is true
  sub any { $_ && return 1 for @_; 0 }
  # All arguments are true
  sub all { $_ || return 0 for @_; 1 }
  # All arguments are false
  sub none { $_ && return 0 for @_; 1 }
  # One argument is false
  sub notall { $_ || return 1 for @_; 0 }
  # How many elements are true
  sub true { scalar grep { $_ } @_ }
  # How many elements are false
  sub false { scalar grep { !$_ } @_ }


SEE ALSO

the Scalar::Util manpage, the List::MoreUtils manpage


COPYRIGHT

Copyright (c) 1997-2006 Graham Barr <gbarr@pobox.com>. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.


Privacy Policy | Email Opt-out | Feedback | Syndication
© ActiveState 2004 All rights reserved