The error means exactly what it says, 'keys' needs a hash, not a hashref, or anything else. This works:

use strict; use warnings; my $obj = Foo->new(); for my $key (keys %{$obj->{acls}}) { print "$key\n"; } package Foo; sub new { my $self = shift; my %obj = ( acls => { a=>1, b=>2 } ); return bless \%obj; }

Note the %{} round $obj->{acls} dereferencing the hashref into a hash.

Update: Just as added clarification, since you were talking about return values from functions:

use strict; use warnings; my $obj = Foo->new(); for my $key (keys %{$obj->{acls}}) { print "$key\n"; } for my $key (keys %{$obj->acls}) { print "$key\n"; } package Foo; sub new { my $self = shift; my %obj = ( acls => { a=>1, b=>2 } ); return bless \%obj; } sub acls { my $self = shift; return \%{$self->{acls}}; }

The second for loop calls acls() to get at the content of the attribute {acls}, dereferences it, and iterates through printing the keys. The first loop is accessing the hashref directly, rather than through a function call.

--------------------------------------------------------------

"If there is such a phenomenon as absolute evil, it consists in treating another human being as a thing."

John Brunner, "The Shockwave Rider".


In reply to Re^3: Hashes as return values by g0n
in thread Hashes as return values by dirtdart

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