Data::Dumper (and the similar Data::Dump::Streamer) are used to look at the contents of variables - generally for diagnostic purposes. They can also be used to serialise a data structure so that it can be persisted to disk (saved and restored later). Data::Dump::Streamer does a better job of handling edge cases than Data::Dumper. Consider:
use strict;
use warnings;
use Data::Dumper;
use Data::Dump::Streamer;
my %hash = (
this => ['one', 2, 3.1],
that => undef,
);
print Dumper (\%hash);
Dump (\%hash);
Prints:
$VAR1 = {
'that' => undef,
'this' => [
'one',
2,
'3.1'
]
};
$HASH1 = {
that => undef,
this => [
'one',
2,
3.1
]
};
DWIM is Perl's answer to Gödel
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