I have often used deeply nested hashes for extracting and reordering information from logs and such. In these cases, objects tend to be overkill because there is no inherent behavior involved. The class (data container) would just be a bunch of accessors anyway.

This is actually one of the points where Perl really shines. I've done similar code in C++ and Java and the monkey motion needed to deal with classes (or structs) made the problem harder than it should have been.

In other cases, of course, using real objects is incredibly useful. But, objects aren't the cure for every problem.

G. Wade

In reply to Re^2: Best Multidimensional Hash Practices? by gwadej
in thread Best Multidimensional Hash Practices? by DamianKaelGreen

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