you might not actually want to do it this way, but:
use strict;
use warnings;
my @array_1 = (1, 12, 34, 50);
my @array_2 = (1, 1234, 50);
my @array_3 = (34, 12, 1, 50);
for ([\@array_1, \@array_2], [\@array_1, \@array_3]) {
if ("@{[sort @{$_->[0]}]}" eq "@{[sort @{$_->[1]}]}") {
print "match: [@{$_->[0]}], [@{$_->[1]}]\n";
} else {
print "mismatch: [@{$_->[0]}], [@{$_->[1]}]\n";
}
}
Prints:
mismatch: [1 12 34 50], [1 1234 50]
match: [1 12 34 50], [34 12 1 50]
where the magic of interest is "@{[sort @array_1]}" eq "@{[sort @array_2]}".
Perl is environmentally friendly - it saves trees
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