I guess I'm still a little confused about when to use parens and when to use brackets.
Parens build a list, brackets build an anonymous array, and return a reference to it. Hashes can only contain scalars as values, so a list won't ever do (except when it contains only one item — but then you don't need a list). An array reference is a scalar, so that will work. As it's the only thing that actually does work properly, Perl's syntax has been optimized to ease access to array references as hash and array values.

$x->{'foo'}[1] actually means: use $x as a hash reference, get the value associated with the string 'foo'. Use this as an array reference and access the second element (with index 1) from it.

Actually you can even split this up into:

$aref = $x->{'foo'}; $aref->[1]
provided you didn't need autovivification, which were to happen in case $x->{'foo'} was undefined, in the former case — but not in the latter.

In reply to Re^3: Accessing an AoHoAoH by bart
in thread Accessing an AoHoAoH by bradcathey

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