First,
$key1 = $key2 is an assignment, not a logical test (==) -- see
perlop. This will return true provided the value in
$key2 evaluates to true.
warnings would have issued a warning if you'd tested your code before posting. See
How do I post a question effectively?.
You need only loop over one hash - you can easily test if that key is present in the second hash by accessing it as a hash. You can sort the keys in the loop declaration.
for my $key (sort { $a <=> $b } keys %websites) {
if (exists $newsites{$key1}) {
print "$key=$newsites{$key1}\n";
}
}
Most of this is discussed in the Data: Hashes (Associative Arrays) section of perlfaq4.
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