The following code assumes that the values are separated by white space (untested):
use strict;
my $input_file = 'foobar.txt';
open my $in, $input_file or die "Failed to read $input_file: $!\n";
my $max = do { local $_ = <$in>; chomp; [ split ] };
while ( <$in> ) {
chomp;
my ( $x, $y ) = split;
$max = [ $x, $y ] if $y > $max->[ 1 ];
}
close $in;
print "max at ($max->[ 0 ], $max->[ 1 ])\n";
Unless your file is huge, the above is probably adequate. If your file
is huge, and the data is smooth and ordered by
x-values, then replacing the
while loop with the following would speed things up a bit:
while ( <$in> ) {
chomp;
my ( $x, $y ) = split;
last if $y <= $max->[ 1 ];
$max = [ $x, $y ];
}
Update: Minor change to original snippet (first data point is now read outside the while loop), plus additional snippet for the case of ordered smooth data.
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