Using Data::PowerSet, I took it up a notch. This will give you subsetA and subsetB plus all the subsets of the subsets:
#!/usr/bin/perl use strict; use Data::PowerSet qw(powerset); my @array = ( '0001.tif ', "\n", '0002.tif ', "\n", '0003.tif ', "\n", '0004.tif ', "\n", '0005.tif ', "\n", '0006.tif ', "\n", '0007.tif ', "\n", '0008.tif ', "\n", '0009.tif ', "\n", '0010.tif ', "\n"); my $powersetA = powerset( grep ($_ % 4 == 1, @array)); for my $p(@$powersetA) { print @$p, "\n"; } my $powersetB = powerset( grep ($_ % 4 == 2, @array)); for my $p(@$powersetB) { print @$p, "\n"; }

In reply to Re: arrays help by Khen1950fx
in thread arrays help by PerlBeginNew

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