I'm a little noobish to perl coding conventions, could someone help explain:
- why are there
/
and/<
in front of perl variables? - what does
\=
and=~
mean, and what is the difference? - why does the code require an ending
/
before the;
, e.g./start=\'([0-9]+)\'/
?
The 1st 3 sub-questions were sort of solved by really the perldocs, but what does the following line means in the code?
push(@{$Start{$start}},$features);
i understand that we are pushing the $features into a @Start array but what does @$Start{$start}
mean? Is it the same as:
@Start = ($start);
Within the code there is something like this:
use FileHandle;
sub open_infile {
my $file = shift;
my $in = FileHandle->new($file,"<:encoding(UTF-8)")
or die "ERROR: cannot open $file: $!\n" if ($Opt_utf8);
$in = new FileHandle("$file")
or die "ERROR: cannot open $file: $!\n" if (!$Opt_utf8);
return $in;
}
$uamf = shift @ARGV;
$uamin = open_infile($uamf);
while (<$uamin>) {
chomp;
if(/<segment /){
/start=\'([0-9]+)\'/;
/end=\'([0-9]+)\'/;
/features=\'([^\']+)\'/;
$features =~ s/annotation;//;
push(@{$Start{$start}},$features);
push(@{$End{$end}},$features);
}
}
EDITED
So after some intensive reading of the perl doc, here's somethings i've gotten
- The
/<segment /
is a regex check that checks whether the readline inwhile (<$uamin>)
contains the following string:<segment
. - Similarly the
/start=\'([0-9]+)\'/
has nothing to to do with instantiating any variable, it's a regex check to see whether the readline inwhile (<$uamin>)
containsstart=\'([0-9]+)\'
which\'([0-9]+)\'
refers to a numeric string. - In
$features =~ s/annotation;//
the=~
is use because the string replacement was testing a regular expression match. See What does =~ do in Perl?