Data Dumper is *everyone's* friend (though you'd want to make sure that the default output for your version is the same as for mine):
use Data::Dumper; sub tell_structure { (my $string = Dumper(shift)) =~ s/\$VAR1 = //; my %regexes = ( qr/^\[\s*/ => 'array', qr/^\{\s*'\w*' => / => 'hash', qr/^'\w*',*\n/ => 'value', ); my @result; my $regex = join "|", keys %regexes; OUTER: while ($string =~ /$regex/) { for my $regex (keys %regexes) { if ($string =~ s/$regex//s) { last OUTER if $regexes{$regex} eq 'value'; push @result, $regexes{$regex}; last; } } } return @result; }
Then you can compare the contents of two returned arrays to determine whether the structures referenced are the same. Or you cd use this to tell you what you've got:
sub print_results { if (@_ == 0) { print "This data structure is a scalar"; } else { if ($_[0] eq 'array') { print "This data structure is an array"; } else { print "This data structure is a hash"; } shift; for (@_) { if ($_ eq 'hash') { print ' of hashes'; } elsif ($_ eq 'array') { print ' of arrays'; } } } print "!\n"; }


§ George Sherston

In reply to Re: Checking whether two variables have the same structure by George_Sherston
in thread Checking whether two variables have the same structure by Corion

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