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I am trying to translate a python script to perl but currently stuck at couple of code snipets.

For instance how to write following python code in perl? (without using any perl array related packages)

# packet here is a binary string
data = array.array( 'h', ( ord( packet[i] ) for i in range( start, end ) ) )
FILE.write(data);

My (failed) attempt:

my @data;
foreach $i ( $start .. $end ) {
   $data[$i] = ord( substr( $packet, $i, 1) );  # Assuming that perl's ord = python's ord
}

print FILE @data;

@ysth, the actual input is a large binary file and in excitment of posting my first question here I forgot to generate a sample input and ouput, sorry about that. For completeness find below the sample input and output.

input: ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'] #think this as packet contents, start=0, end=4

ouput in python:

> cat py.out | xxd
0000000: 6100 6200 6300 6400                      a.b.c.d.

output in perl:

> cat pl.out | xxd
0000000: 3937 3938 3939 3130 30                   979899100

@Pedro Silva, As I understand in first line of your suggestion you just replace for loop with map functionality, the effect is same. The unpack 'W*' returns error as W is not a valid type (perl 5.8.8).

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    As always with "how to write language X code in language Y", if you provide actual sample input and output, you allow people who only know language Y to answer; without, you are restricting yourself to answers from people who know both languages
    – ysth
    Jul 4, 2011 at 0:49
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    In what way was your attempt a failure?
    – ysth
    Jul 4, 2011 at 0:50
  • @LovelyVirus: I guess that was added in a later version; it stands for unsigned char value (which can be greater than 255, otherwise you can use C, which only works up to 8bit). My point with unpack was that, since you mention $packet is a binary string, you might want to consider unpack if the data is not simple uchars. Jul 4, 2011 at 12:54

1 Answer 1

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edit

You need to clarify what you're saying. On my python (2.7.2), this is wrong:

FILE.write(data)

because data needs to be a string. I think what you mean to say instead is:

data.tofile(FILE)

Anyway, is this what you want?

print pack("s*", unpack("C*", "abcd"))
# piped through xxd => 0000000: 6100 6200 6300 6400     a.b.c.d.

Have a look through perldoc -f pack for the correct template string to use. Since you don't have access to W (unsigned wchar), i'm using C (unsigned char). s is a signed short (corresponding to python's h.)

/edit

There are no typed arrays in Perl. ord returns the numeric value of the first character of its argument.

Assuming this is what you want, just map the list resulting from splitting $packet on each character to @data, transforming each element with ord (the argument $_ is implicitly given.)

my @data = map { ord } split //, $packet; # or
my @data = unpack 'W*', $packet;          

Optionally, using a range different from the actual lower and upper bounds on $packet:

(split //, $packet)[$start .. $end];    # or
 split //, substr $packet, $start, $end # ysth's version
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  • or split(//, substr($packet, $start, $end))
    – ysth
    Jul 4, 2011 at 1:33
  • @Pedro Silva, FILE.write(data) is working in my tests (implicit conversion to string?). Anyway the pack/unpack suggestion is promising (as tested for dummy data). I'll test it on actuall data and will update here. As for 'W' option I believe I have it in my version of perl back in home. Will try that as well. Thanks! Jul 4, 2011 at 15:26
  • Thanks for the hints Pedro. With pack/unpack one can mimic array.array(typecode, ...) functionality. As for FILE.write(array), it appears that array.tostring() is called implicitly... Jul 5, 2011 at 1:18

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