Yes, it's generally best to avoid unnecessary eval STRING, so a simple iteration over the result of spliting the string should do it e.g
my $h = { 'misc' => {}, 'docs' => { 'howtos' => { 'email' => { 'index.html' => { 'date' => '21-1-2004', 'size' => '691' } }, 'ftp' => {}, 'ssh' => {} } } }; use Data::Dumper; print Dumper( find_hash($h,"/docs/howtos/email/") ); sub find_hash { my($tree, $path) = @_; my $n = $tree; for(grep length, split '/', $path) { return unless exists $n->{$_} and defined $n->{$_}; $n = $n->{$_}; } return $n; } __output__ $VAR1 = { 'index.html' => { 'date' => '21-1-2004', 'size' => '691' } };
That could probably do with a bit more data validation but it should illustrate, roughly, a saner approach to iterating through your nested hash.
HTH

_________
broquaint


In reply to Re: Building dynamic nested hash references by broquaint
in thread Building dynamic nested hash references by ryan

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