I agree, using a matrix of some sort makes the most sense in this case. Often (actually almost always), if you find yourself using variables to hold other variable names you're looking a perfectly good data structure in the face without realizing it. Variable names like 'a4' scream MATRIX. Here's another way to represent a matrix in perl:
$matrix{'a,4'} = 20;
$matrix{'b,5'} = 30;
Like the nested hash solution(
$matrix{'a'}{2} = 5;), it lets you use non-numeric indices but uses a little less memory. You can loop through it like so:
for my $x ('a'..'g') {
for my $y (1..6) {
my $val = $matrix{"$x,$y"};
...
}
}
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