Thanks for clarifying.

Here are some more examples for those reading later and who haven't previously had to work with non-printing characters in this way (e.g. me a few hours ago):

# default $; does not print perl -e 'print join $;, 1..5' 12345 # but $; is still in the string perl -e '@x = split ($;, join ($;, 1..5)); print join ":", @x' 1:2:3:4:5

That still does leave the issue of debugging using print statements, as [5,55] and [55,5] will both print as 555 on a terminal. The point is effectively moot, though, as the other posts have shown multidimensional indexing is slower and should probably not be used in this case.


In reply to Re^6: Fastest way to lookup a point in a set by swl
in thread Fastest way to lookup a point in a set by eyepopslikeamosquito

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