If comparing two print statements and then modifying one so it works like the other exceeds your current skills, I recommend learning some more Perl. It's not really hard:
@info{ @columns } is equivalent to $info{ gi }, $info{ version } and $info{ cds }, because that's what @columns contains.
The join function joins a list with a string. I chose * as the string, but you might want to choose a different separator.
In reply to Re^11: Read, match string and print
by Corion
in thread Read, match string and print
by sophix
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