Here's a couple very common example use cases for shift, unshift, push. The @INC array is special in Perl, and is used to store directories where libraries are housed. To add a custom location, it's common to unshift @INC
The most common use of shift is extracting parameters from the special @_ array within a subroutine. @_ in Perl is the default array, and is implicitly used to store all parameters going into a subroutine. In the shift line I don't say shift @_;, because the @_ is implicit.
In the last example, I use push to add elements to a new array based on contents from a different array.
#!/usr/bin/perl # unshift print "$_\n" for @INC; unshift @INC, '/home/steve/my_lib_dir'; print "$_\n" for @INC; # shift parameter("Hello, world!"); sub parameter { my $param = shift; print "$param\n"; } # push my @numbers = qw(1 2 3 4 5); my @totals; for my $elem (@numbers){ push @totals, $elem + 5; } print "$_\n" for @totals;
-stevieb
In reply to Re^5: reverse a string in place
by stevieb
in thread reverse a string in place
by Priti24
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