That's not going to prove very useful, because then in the caller you'd need to assemble the branches again. delete can handle indirection: You can do something like

delete $node->{$doomed_key}; # recurse through remaining elements

That's fair enough: but you don't need to muck around with copies to achieve that. If in the caller code you have %Hash, and call your function with an argument \%Hash, any changes made indirectly to that data will show up in the caller. This is one of the main features of references.

It's a matter of style, so there will be differing opinions, but generally you can use my ($arg1, $arg2, ...) = @_ to get your parameters. (Sometimes shift is more appropriate, and sometimes even $_[0] etc. are the Right Thing -- but not typically.)


In reply to Re^3: Problems With Hash Pointer Assignments by gaal
in thread Problems With Hash Pointer Assignments by EchoAngel

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