If I saw this behavior, the first thing I'd look
at would be the contents of your data hash. The
data hash has clearly been set up improperly if
the value is a null string-- most likely you're
accessing keys that aren't actually in the hash.
In particular, this is a great opportunity for the
data dumper:
use strict;
use Data::Dumper;
my %lang_dev;
# ...
print Dumper(\%lang_dev);
Incidently, if you want to dereference a hash
reference and lookup a key at the same time, it's
cleaner to write
$hash_ref->{$key}
although it's the same as
${$hash_ref}{$key}.
Watch out for the proper bracing with references
though. The following code doesn't do what you
think it does:
my @foo = @$hash_ref->{$key}
The @ will try to reference $hash_ref first, instead
of decoding $hash_ref->{$key} into a reference-to-array.
In such a situation, use braces to force context:
my @foo = @{$hash_ref->{$key}}
I only bring this up because the reference precedence
rules have cause me heartache in the past. Is there a
good formal rule for determining which decoding gets
done when in situations like this? I just add extra
braces when I don't know, but this could cause unnecessarily
unreadable code.
-Ted
Originally posted as a Categorized Answer.
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