Some little variation
use strict;
use warnings;
my @arr1 = (
['a','b','c'],
['d','e','f'],
['g','h','i'] );
my @arr2 = (
['j','k','l'],
['m','n','o','p'],
['q','r'] );
#1 iterate using map and join
print map {(join ',',@{$arr1[$_]},@{$arr2[$_]})."\n"} 0..$#arr1;
#2 itarting modifying list separator
{ # scope to limit the effect of next statement
local $"=','; # $LIST_SEPARATOR
print map {"@{$arr1[$_]},@{$arr2[$_]}\n"} 0..$#arr1;
}
#3 or consuming arrays
while (my $one = shift @arr1 and my $two = shift @arr2){
print +(join ',',@{$one},@{$two})."\n"
}
L*
There are no rules, there are no thumbs..
Reinvent the wheel, then learn The Wheel; may be one day you reinvent one of THE WHEELS.
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