Update: Whoops! Looks like Christoforo suggested this first. Not sure why that post's code is all struck out though.

Set::CrossProduct to the rescue:

use strict; use warnings; use Set::CrossProduct; my %hash=('ID' => { 'key1' => [ qw/ key1_val1 key1_val2/ ], 'key2' => [ qw/ key2_val1 key2_val2/ ] } ); foreach my $id ( keys %hash ) { my $keys = $hash{$id}; my $set = Set::CrossProduct->new( [ values %$keys ] ); print join( ', ', $id, @$_ ), "\n" while $_ = $set->get; }
Results in
ID, key2_val1, key1_val1 ID, key2_val1, key1_val2 ID, key2_val2, key1_val1 ID, key2_val2, key1_val2
Not exactly the order of your requested output, but that's because your keys are in a hash.

In reply to Re: Massive expansion of a hash of arrays? by djerius
in thread Massive expansion of a hash of arrays? by Amblikai

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