Hello ic23oluk,

I think you are looking for something like that (sample of code below):

#!/usr/bin/perl use strict; use warnings; use Data::Dumper; # CHECK FOR CORRECT USAGE unless (@ARGV == 1){ die "Usage: perl $0 \"file.txt\"\n"; } my %hash; while (<>) { chomp; next if /^\s*$/; # skip empty lines my @columns = split (/\t/, $_); next if $columns[0] =~ m/[^0-9.]/; # skipe lines that do no start + with a number $hash{$columns[1]}{$columns[2]} = $columns[4]; } print Dumper \%hash; __END__ $ perl test.pl file.txt $VAR1 = { 'Sample 1' => { 'actin' => '20,514', 'claudin' => '30,544', 'occludin' => '31,183' }, 'H2O' => { 'actin' => undef, 'occludin' => undef, 'claudin' => undef }, 'Sample 4' => { 'actin' => '20,498', 'occludin' => '27,869', 'claudin' => '25,365' }, 'Sample 3' => { 'occludin' => '34,556', 'claudin' => '32,065', 'actin' => '24,213' }, 'Sample 2' => { 'claudin' => '25,611', 'occludin' => '27,831', 'actin' => '20,416' } };

I am wondering though if you want to right on on top of common keys or you want a more complex data structure like hashes of hashes, read more about it here HASHES OF HASHES.

Hope this helps, BR.

Seeking for Perl wisdom...on the process of learning...not there...yet!

In reply to Re: table into complex data structure by thanos1983
in thread table into complex data structure by ic23oluk

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