in reply to Fastest way to test membership in a constant set

To answer your questions: 1. I could use non-XS Readonly for non-production (or Tie::Hash::FixedKeys as well). The desire for constness comes from wanting to write code that is self-documenting and abuse-preventing. In our environment, hacks and cut-n-paste from production code can (and does) happen. I want to minimize the hacks that will eventually occur but at the same time maximize speed. Sadly, I don't think my version of perl supports Hash::Util.
  • Comment on Re: Fastest way to test membership in a constant set

Replies are listed 'Best First'.
Re^2: Fastest way to test membership in a constant set
by BrowserUk (Patriarch) on Jul 26, 2007 at 16:06 UTC
    Sadly, I don't think my version of perl supports Hash::Util

    You're using older than 5.8.0? Isn't that at least 5 years old?

    I'm not sure, and a quick scan of perldelta didn't tell me, when Internals first appeared, but it can do the same job with a minor additional amount of work. Once you have built your hash, you have to set the values readonly as well as the hash itself. Hardly onerous though:

    #! perl -slw use strict; use Internals qw[ SetReadOnly ]; my %set = map{ $_ => 1 } qw[ age old years ]; SetReadOnly( \$_ ) for values %set; ## Freeze values SetReadOnly \%set; ## and keys. for my $unknown ( qw[ age sex old young years minutes] ) { print "$unknown ", exists $set{ $unknown } ? 'exists' : ' does not exist'; } eval{ $set{ age } = 123 } or print $@; eval{ $set{ fred } = 1 } or print $@; __END__ C:\test>junk3 age exists sex does not exist old exists young does not exist years exists minutes does not exist Modification of a read-only value attempted at C:\test\junk3.pl line 1 +7. Attempt to access disallowed key 'fred' in a restricted hash at C:\tes +t\junk3.pl line 18.

    Examine what is said, not who speaks -- Silence betokens consent -- Love the truth but pardon error.
    "Science is about questioning the status quo. Questioning authority".
    In the absence of evidence, opinion is indistinguishable from prejudice.