That's what hashes are good at. Since keys have to be unique, just plop your parsed version of $mer into a hash as the hash's key. Value is unimportant, though you could use it as a counter.
Example just teaking your code slightly:
use strict;
use warnings;
open (MER, "Extracted.c") or die "Can't open input file. $!\n";
my %cases;
for my $mer(<Mer>){
my $control;
while ($control!=15){
$mer =~ s/ //;
$control++;
}
$cases{$mer}++;
}
foreach $key ( keys %cases ) {
print $key, "\n";
}
I'm not really clear on that the inner loop is for. You only want to remove the first fifteen spaces from $mer? ...ok. I guess that's working out ok. You could alternatively use something like:
substr($mer,0,15) =~ s/ //g;
That would eliminate the while loop and $control counter.
Dave
"If I had my life to do over again, I'd be a plumber." -- Albert Einstein
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