The recursive example is quite a simple and good one. If you don't understand it then you should read up on the topic of recursion. It's quite a widely used concept in programming and it can make things that would otherwise be very hard to program, quite easy and concise. Developing a good understanding of what recursion is, how/why it works, and when it's a good idea to use it will help you not just solve your current problem, but become a better programmer.

Wikipedia has a reasonably good article on recursion.

If this helps, here's a slightly rewritten version of your recursive function:

sub do_something_recursively { my ($element) = @_; # Here we will do something just to $element # without worrying about recursion at all. $element->set_class("processed"); # Now we loop through each child element foreach my $child ($element->content_list) { # Skip text nodes next unless ref $child; # And we call *this function* on the child do_something_recursively($child); } } do_something_recursively($root_element);
perl -E'sub Monkey::do{say$_,for@_,do{($monkey=[caller(0)]->[3])=~s{::}{ }and$monkey}}"Monkey say"->Monkey::do'

In reply to Re: Inspecting each element in a tree, specifically HTML::Tree by tobyink
in thread Inspecting each element in a tree, specifically HTML::Tree by hulot

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