Current Perl documentation can be found at perldoc.perl.org.
Here is our local, out-dated (pre-5.6) version:
The most efficient way is using
pack() and
unpack(). This is faster than using
substr() when take many, many strings. It is slower for just a few.
Here is a sample chunk of code to break up and put back together again some fixed-format input lines, in this case from the output of a normal, Berkeley-style ps:
# sample input line:
# 15158 p5 T 0:00 perl /home/tchrist/scripts/now-what
$PS_T = 'A6 A4 A7 A5 A*';
open(PS, "ps|");
print scalar <PS>;
while (<PS>) {
($pid, $tt, $stat, $time, $command) = unpack($PS_T, $_);
for $var (qw!pid tt stat time command!) {
print "$var: <$$var>\n";
}
print 'line=', pack($PS_T, $pid, $tt, $stat, $time, $command),
"\n";
}
We've used $$var in a way that forbidden by use strict 'refs'. That is, we've promoted a string to a scalar variable reference using
symbolic references. This is ok in small programs, but doesn't scale well.
It also only works on global variables, not lexicals.