Hello Anonymous Monk,
Similar question to yours was asked at the Monastery before How do I get the Nth Character of a String?.
Here are sample of codes from the relevant question:
#!/usr/bin/perl use strict; use warnings; use Data::Dumper; use feature 'say'; # use Benchmark qw(:all) ; # WindowsOS use Benchmark::Forking qw( timethese cmpthese ); # UnixOS sub getn_unpack { return unpack "x" . ($_[1]-1) . "a", $_[0]; } sub getn_substr { return substr $_[0], $_[1]-1, 1; } sub getn_split { return +(split //, $_[0])[$_[1]-1]; } my $strNum = "12345678910"; my $string = "ACATCACCTCCCACAACGAGGACTACACCATCGTGGAACA"; # say getn_unpack($string, 10); # say getn_substr($string, 10); # say getn_split($string, 10); my $results = timethese(1000000000, { 'unpack' => getn_unpack($string, + 10), 'substr' => getn_substr($string, 10), 'split' => getn_split($string, 10), }, 'none'); cmpthese( $results ); __END__ $ perl test.pl Rate unpack substr split unpack 171232877/s -- -23% -31% substr 223713647/s 31% -- -10% split 248138958/s 45% 11% --
It looks like the more efficient choice would be to use unpack. Something like that could do what you need. Reading one line at a time, extract the data that you want (one character) and finally push it into an array. Sample of code below:
#!/usr/bin/perl use strict; use warnings; use Data::Dumper; sub getn_unpack { return unpack "x" . ($_[1]-1) . "a", $_[0]; } my $file = 'data.txt'; my @array; if (open(my $fh, '<', $file)) { while (<$fh>) { chomp; push @array, getn_unpack($_, 10); } } else { warn "Could not open file '$file' $!\n"; } print Dumper \@array; __END__ $ cat data.txt ACATCACCTCCCACAACGAGGACTACACCATCGTGGAACA ACATCACCTACCACAACGAGGACTACACCATCGTGGAACA $ perl test.pl $VAR1 = [ 'C', 'A' ];
Update: Thanks to fellow Monk karlgoethebier for observing my mistake I would suggest an alternative solution to your problem. Use split instead of unpack. See sample of code below:
#!/usr/bin/perl use strict; use warnings; use Data::Dumper; sub getn_split { return +(split //, $_[0])[$_[1]-1]; } my $file = 'data.txt'; my @array; if (open(my $fh, '<', $file)) { while (<$fh>) { chomp; push @array, getn_split($_, 10); } } else { warn "Could not open file '$file' $!\n"; } print Dumper \@array; __END__ $ cat data.txt ACATCACCTCCCACAACGAGGACTACACCATCGTGGAACA ACATCACCTACCACAACGAGGACTACACCATCGTGGAACA $ perl test.pl $VAR1 = [ 'C', 'A' ];
Hope this helps, BR
In reply to Re: Faster and more efficient way to read a file vertically
by thanos1983
in thread Faster and more efficient way to read a file vertically
by Anonymous Monk
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