I guess I obscured my question with too much detail about the problem. I'm asking mostly to satisfy my curiosity.
Without all the
$vscr baggage, my question is:
given an array of arrays (of arbitrary dimensions), how do you hit every element, first visiting the first element in each array, then the second, and so on?
For instance, if you had:
my $array = [[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6], [7, 8, 9]];
you'd want to visit in the order 1, 4, 7, 2, 5, 8, 3, 6, 9.
Did that make sense?
update: why @ (in scalar context) and $# didn't occur to me when I posted this, I don't know. That said, mapcar is damn cool. | [reply] [Watch: Dir/Any] [d/l] |
Why not cycle through the top-level array, shifting off the bottom element in each sub-array? Something like
@array = ([1,2,3],[4,5,6],[7,8,9]);
while (grep scalar @{ $_ }, @array) {
for $i (@array) {
print shift @{ $i };
}
}
This has the merit that not only do you not need to code (or even initialise, or know) the number and length of sub-arrays, but they can also be of different lengths.
§ George Sherston | [reply] [Watch: Dir/Any] [d/l] |
Assuming you have fixed-size subarrays, you can do this:
my $columns = 3;
foreach my $x (0 .. $columns - 1)
{
foreach my $y (0 .. $#array)
{
print $array->[$y]->[$x]
}
}
update: went back and re-read question. | [reply] [Watch: Dir/Any] [d/l] |