I'm new to perl and I can't find whether I can manipulate the output format in perl or not.
for a code like
print "$arOne[i] => $arTwo[i]\n";
I want the oputput to be like
8 => 9
10 => 25
7 => 456
If it is possible, then how to do it?
You want to use printf
.
printf ("%2d => %-3d\n", $arOne[$i], $arTwo[$i]);
The formatting instructions are embedded between the %
and a letter. In your case, you print numbers, so you need the letter d
. The number left to the d
specifies how many digits you want to reserve for the number. In your case, I made the assumption that the left number consists of at most two digits, while the right number consists of at most three digits. That might vary. Finally, the -
in front of the 3d
tells printf
to left (rather than right) align the number.
In the spirit of TMTOWTDI-ness, there's also the old facility of perl formats:
#! /usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use List::MoreUtils qw(each_array);
my @arOne = (8, 10, 7);
my @arTwo = (9, 25, 456); # @arTwoDeeTwo ? @ceeThreePO ?
my ($one, $two);
format STDOUT =
@> => @<<
$one,$two
.
# Now write to the format we described above
my $next_pair = each_array(@arOne, @arTwo);
while (($one, $two) = $next_pair->()) {
write;
}
UPDATE
Note that this "report generation" capability is little-used in contemporary perl programming. The printf
suggestion is typically more flexible (and less surprising). It seemed a pity, however, not to mention formats in perl in question about formatting in perl.