I've commonly used two ways to look at each byte in turn of a binary buffer.
The clearest is probably
foreach my $byte (unpack "C*", $string) {
do something with my $byte
But I've also used something like
while ($string =~ /./sg) {
do something with $1
and always found the equivilent construct using substr instead of a regex to be unenlightened.
But what's a good way to do this with a potentially large buffer? Does the first way generate a huge list first, or does it optomize down like 1..100000 does in a modern perl build?
Is there a, shall we say even "cooler", method that I'm missing?
—John
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