Another option is to use Array::Compare, as it can handle alpha, numeric and alphanumeric array data:
use Modern::Perl;
use Array::Compare;
my @a = ( 1, 2, 3 );
my @b = ( 2, 3, 1 );
my @c = ( 1, 2, 4 );
my @d = qw/ a b c a /;
my @e = qw/ a a b c /;
my @f = qw/ 1 b c 1 /;
my @g = qw/ 1 1 b c /;
say 'The arrays are', ArraysIdentical( \@a, \@b ) ? ' ' : ' not ', 'id
+entical.';
sub ArraysIdentical {
Array::Compare->new()->perm( $_[0], $_[1] ) || 0;
}
Output:
The arrays are identical.
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