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4.6. Creating an Anonymous Hash

Similar to creating an anonymous array, you can also create an anonymous hash. Consider the crew roster from Chapter 3:

my %gilligan_info = (
  name => 'Gilligan',
  hat => 'White',
  shirt => 'Red',
  position => 'First Mate',
);
my %skipper_info = (
  name => 'Skipper',
  hat => 'Black',
  shirt => 'Blue',
  position => 'Captain',
);
my @crew = (\%gilligan_info, \%skipper_info);

The variables %gilligan_info and %skipper_info are just temporaries, needed to create the hashes for the final data structure. You can construct the reference directly with the anonymous hash constructor, which is Yet Another Meaning for curly braces, as you'll see. Replace this:

my $ref_to_gilligan_info;
{
  my %gilligan_info = (
    name => 'Gilligan',
    hat => 'White',
    shirt => 'Red',
    position => 'First Mate',
  );
  $ref_to_gilligan_info = \%gilligan_info;
}

with the anonymous hash constructor:

my $ref_to_gilligan_info = {
  name => 'Gilligan',
  hat => 'White',
  shirt => 'Red',
  position => 'First Mate',
};

The value between the open and closing curly braces is an eight-element list. The eight-element list becomes a four-element anonymous hash (four key-value pairs). A reference to this hash is taken and returned as a single scalar value, which is placed into the scalar variable. Thus, you cam rewrite the roster creation as:

my $ref_to_gilligan_info = {
  name => 'Gilligan',
  hat => 'White',
  shirt => 'Red',
  position => 'First Mate',
};
my $ref_to_skipper_info = {
  name => 'Skipper',
  hat => 'Black',
  shirt => 'Blue',
  position => 'Captain',
};
my @crew = ($ref_to_gilligan_info, $ref_to_skipper_info);

As before, you can now avoid the temporary variables and insert the values directly into the top-level list:

my @crew = (
  {
    name => 'Gilligan',
    hat => 'White',
    shirt => 'Red',
    position => 'First Mate',
  },
  {
    name => 'Skipper',
    hat => 'Black',
    shirt => 'Blue',
    position => 'Captain',
  },
);

Note the use of trailing commas on the lists when the element is not immediately next to the closing brace, bracket, or parenthesis. This is a nice style element to adopt because it allows for easy maintenance. Lines can be added quickly, rearranged, or commented out without destroying the integrity of the list.

Now @crew is identical to the value it had before, but you no longer need to invent names for the intermediate data structures. As before, the @crew variable contains two elements, each of which is a reference to a hash containing keyword-based information about a particular crew member.

The anonymous hash constructor always evaluates its contents in a list context and then constructs a hash from key/value pairs, just as if you had assigned that list to a named hash. A reference to that hash is returned as a single value that fits wherever a scalar fits.

Now, a word from our parser: because blocks and anonymous hash constructors both use curly braces in roughly the same places in the syntax tree, the compiler has to make ad hoc determinations about which of the two you mean. If the compiler ever decides incorrectly, you might need to provide a hint to get what you want. To show the compiler that you want an anonymous hash constructor, put a plus sign before the opening curly brace: +{ ... }. To be sure to get a block of code, just put a semicolon (representing an empty statement) at the beginning of the block: {; ... }.



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