1

The program below should take an array and compress it so that there are no repeated products and add up the totals, so:

A B B C D A E F
100 30 50 60 100 50 20 90

Becomes:

A 150
B 80
C 60
D 100
E 20
F 90

The code below runs and works the way I want it to:

#! C:\strawberry\perl\bin
use strict;
use warnings;

my @firstarray = qw(A B B C D A E F);
my @secondarray = qw (100 30 50 60 100 50 20 90); 
my @totalarray; 
my %cleanarray; 
my $i;

# creates the 2d array which holds variables retrieved from a file
@totalarray = ([@firstarray],[@secondarray]);
my $count = $#{$totalarray[0]};

# prints the array for error checking
for ($i = 0;  $i <= $count; $i++) {
    print "\n $i) $totalarray[0][$i]\t $totalarray[1][$i]\n";
}

# fills a hash with products (key) and their related totals (value)
for ($i = 0;  $i <= $count; $i++) {
    $cleanarray{ $totalarray[0][$i] } = $cleanarray{$totalarray[0][$i]} + $totalarray[1][$i];
}

# prints the hash
my $x = 1;
while (my( $k, $v )= each %cleanarray) {
    print "$x) Product: $k Cost: $cleanarray{$k} \n";
    $x++;
}

However before printing the hash it gives me the "Use of uninitialized value in addition (+)" error" six times. Being very new to Perl (this is my first Perl program outside of a text book), can someone tell me why this is happening? It seems like I have initialized everything...

4
  • 2
    You have never initialized @cleanarray ... the error message is telling you exactly what the problem is. Apr 29, 2012 at 18:14
  • 2
    I dare say you might want to take a look at perldsc and maybe even perlstyle. A lot of problems can be avoided by having a clean data structure and accessing it appropriately. Apr 29, 2012 at 18:28
  • This code should have died with the error Global symbol "%cleanarray" requires explicit package name at .... So, it is highly unlikely that you have posted the code you actually use.
    – TLP
    Apr 29, 2012 at 18:35
  • @TLP - you are correct, I posted @cleanarray, in my code it is %cleanarray, edited.
    – RedRaven
    Apr 29, 2012 at 18:38

3 Answers 3

3

It gives me compile errors in these lines:

my @cleanarray;

It is a hash.

my %cleanarray;

And here:

$cleanarray{ $totalarray[0][$i] } = $cleanarray{$totalarray[0][$i]} + totalarray[1][$i];

You missed the sigil of totalarray. It is $totalarray[1][$i]

The undefined message it is because $cleanarray{$totalarray[0][$i]} doesn't exists. Using the shorter:

$cleanarray{ $totalarray[0][$i] } += totalarray[1][$i];

will work without warnings.

1
  • Perfect, that worked. The first compiler error was, again, me failing to work with Stackoverflow. Thanks.
    – RedRaven
    Apr 29, 2012 at 18:26
0

You are using cleanarray as a hash but it is declared as an array

0

You may find you prefer this reorganization of your program.

use strict;
use warnings;

my @firstarray = qw (A B B C D A E F);
my @secondarray = qw (100 30 50 60 100 50 20 90); 

# prints the data for error checking
for my $i (0 .. $#firstarray) {
  printf "%d) %s %.2f\n", $i, $firstarray[$i], $secondarray[$i];
}
print "\n";

# fills a hash with products (key) and their related totals (value)
my %cleanarray; 
for my $i (0 .. $#firstarray) {
  $cleanarray{ $firstarray[$i] } += $secondarray[$i];
}

# prints the hash
my $n = 1;
for my $key (sort keys %cleanarray) {
  printf "%d) Product: %s Cost: %.2f\n", $n++, $key, $cleanarray{$key};
}
0

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