People have covered the usage of sort, but I think this is also worth mentioning -- when you're swapping two elements, it's not required to use a placeholder. Perl (at least 5.6) allows you to declare anonymous arrays, and abuse them for the greater good.

compare

$placeholder = $date[$n]; $date[$n] = $date[$n2]; $date[$n2] = $placeholder;
with
($date[$n], $date[$n2])=($date[$n2], $date[$n]);

each one swaps the contents of $date[$n] and $date[$n2], but there's (IMO) clarity in the second one, as well as a reduction in line count. Here's a small sample to flesh out the idea :
my @foo; $foo[0]=0; $foo[1]=1; print "@foo\n"; ($foo[0], $foo[1])=($foo[1], $foo[0]); print "@foo\n";

In reply to swapping elements efficiently (boo) by boo_radley
in thread bubble sort problems by BradThePerlNeophyte

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