What is happening in that one liner:
print "$vm, $filer, \n" if ! $seen{"$vm:$filler"}++
It's quite an elegant piece of code, with a lot going on. So let's break it down: For bonus points, you can probably do:
foreach my $key ( keys %seen ) { print "$key was seen $seen{$key} times\n"; }
Does that make it any clearer?

In reply to Re^3: Uniq and sort in perl by Preceptor
in thread Uniq and sort in perl by slayedbylucifer

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