The reason it's not working is because you're creating a reference to exactly the same variable each time (because @temp is global instead of lexical).
What you should do, is change @temp to be a lexical variable, scoped to the body of the while loop. That way, a new lexical variable will be created each time, and the reference that you stored away in the hash will keep all the old lexical variables alive (but anonymous). Like so:
open(PARMFILE, "< $parmfile") or die "unsuccessful open of input file $parmfile"; while (<PARMFILE>) { next if /^#/ || /^\s*$/; chomp; my @temp=split(/\s+/,$_); # Note the 'my' $dbparms{$temp[2]} = \@temp; } close PARMFILE; foreach $item (sort keys %dbparms) { print "$item => $dbparms{$item} \n"; }
And that should get the effect you want.
Update: I tested it, and it does work, although your print loop doesn't dereference the array-ref so you just get a bunch of lines like: '01 => ARRAY(0x1accdcc)'. Change the print loop to the following for a more useful output ;-)
foreach $item (sort keys %dbparms) { $" = ','; print "$item => @{$dbparms{$item}} \n"; }
bbfu
Seasons don't fear The Reaper.
Nor do the wind, the sun, and the rain.
We can be like they are.
In reply to (bbfu) (reference to global variable) Re: associate that array with this hash?
by bbfu
in thread associate that array with this hash?
by shaezi
| For: | Use: | ||
| & | & | ||
| < | < | ||
| > | > | ||
| [ | [ | ||
| ] | ] |