Do you mean "print a single row of a
two-dimensional array?
A single-dimensional array is pretty much a row: row 0. In that case
print @array;
would do it. A two-dimensional array in Perl is an array of array references. In that case the row needs to be dereferenced. The following are two ways it can be done.
use strict;
my @a = (qw/a b c/);
my @b = (qw/d e f/);
my @c = (qw/g h i/);
my @d = (\@a, \@b, \@c);
print @{ @d[0] }; #print the first row (a b c)
Or
use strict;
my @a = (qw/a b c/);
my @b = (qw/d e f/);
my @c = (qw/g h i/);
my $d = [\@a, \@b, \@c];
print @{ $d->[1] }; # print the second row (d e f)
hope this helps,
--david
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