3

I've a Perl subroutine which asks input from User. I perform a check inside that subroutine itself whether the input entered is a valid input.

If it's not, I want to call the subroutine again to let the user enter a valid input this time.

My subroutine is as follows:

sub some_routine {    
    print "Enter a number to select   (1) Apple (2) Mango (3) grapes:"
    $value=STDIN;
    if($value =~ /[^1-3]/ ) {
        print "The input is not valid!";
        print "Do you want to continue selecting a fruit again (Y or N)?";
        $choice = STDIN;
        if( $choice eq "y") {
            ### I want to call the subroutine again to enter input ###
          } else {
            exit;
        }
    }
}

So how to recurse a subroutine in this?

5
  • 4
    Why recourse? Maybe a while loop? Sep 29, 2009 at 7:01
  • When i use some_routine(); to recurse nothing happens (it doesnot go back asking the user to input again for selecting)... What shall i do? Sep 29, 2009 at 7:24
  • Hi ALL ... Thanks for your Answers.... Above comment of mine was due to one thing as follows:::::: ==> When i give the value "y" ... $choice becomes "y\n" and it 's not getting into if sttmnt as it has a newline character appended to it... TO recurse a subroutine in this case :: some_routine(); sttmnt is sufficient :) Sep 29, 2009 at 7:37
  • 1
    the link you posted to Using Perl5 in Web Programming is to a VERY OLD (1996), VERY PIRATED book. Don't use this book for both reasons. There are good, legal, author approved resources available, like hop.perl.plover.com, and all the books at perl.org/books/library.html
    – daotoad
    Sep 29, 2009 at 10:07

9 Answers 9

10

To call a subroutine recursively in Perl, you just call the sub from itself, the same as in any other language:

sub factorial {
  my $num = shift;
  return 1 if $num < 2;
  return $num * factorial($num - 1);
}

However, you don't really want to use recursion for a "repeat until condition changes" scenario.
That's what while loops are for
:

my $valid;
while (!$valid) {
  print "Enter something: ";
  my $data = <STDIN>;
  $valid = validate($data);
  print "Bzzt!  Invalid - try again!\n" unless $valid;
}
6
  • While was my first thought too, but this is Perl: There's More Than One Way To Do It. Sep 29, 2009 at 7:20
  • 2
    @Jurily: there's more than one way to do it, but that doesn't mean that they're all equally good for all cases.
    – Telemachus
    Sep 29, 2009 at 11:41
  • 4
    TMTOWTDI, BMOTWAW. There's More Than One Way To Do It, But Most Of Those Ways Are Wrong. Sep 29, 2009 at 12:19
  • This is the way I would do it, even if my code looks a bit different. Subroutines should do their one thing, and you shouldn't hide program flow in them. In this code, all the flow is right there in front of you. Sep 29, 2009 at 23:46
  • Hey, I want to invent a new acronym: TMTOWTDI, BLSOO. There's More Than One Way To Do It, But Lets Standardize On One.
    – Powerlord
    Oct 1, 2009 at 13:27
7

There's no reason to use recursion for this. A simple while loop will do.

my $input_valid = 0;
while( !$input_valid ) { 
    print "Enter some input: ";
    my $input = <STDIN>;
    $input_valid = validate_input( $input );
}

If validate_input returns 0, the loop will repeat.

1
  • Pretty much any (or, rather all) recursive code can be, with varying degrees of effort, re-written as a loop :)
    – DVK
    Sep 29, 2009 at 7:06
4

recursive

sub select_fruit {    
    print "Enter a number to select   (1) Apple (2) Mango (3) grapes:"
    $value=<STDIN>;
    if($value =~ /[^1-3]/ ) {
        print "The input is not valid!";
        print "Do you want to continue selecting a fruit again (Y or N)?";
        $choice = <STDIN>;
        if( $choice eq "y") {
            $value = select_fruit();
          } else {
            exit;
        }
    }
    return $value;
}

goto - Tail Call Optimization (TCO)

sub select_fruit {
    print "Enter a number to select   (1) Apple (2) Mango (3) grapes:"
    $value=<STDIN>;
    if($value =~ /[^1-3]/ ) {
        print "The input is not valid!";
        print "Do you want to continue selecting a fruit again (Y or N)?";
        $choice = <STDIN>;
        if( $choice eq "y") {
            goto &select_fruit;
          } else {
            exit;
        }
    }
    return $value;
}

or redo

sub select_fruit {
SELECT_FRUIT: {
       print "Enter a number to select   (1) Apple (2) Mango (3) grapes:"
       $value=<STDIN>;
       if($value =~ /[^1-3]/ ) {
           print "The input is not valid!";
           print "Do you want to continue selecting a fruit again (Y or N)?";
           $choice = <STDIN>;
           if( $choice eq "y") {
               redo SELECT_FRUIT; # same as goto SELECT_FRUIT;
             } else {
               exit;
            }
        }
        return $value;
    }
}

and so ...

3
  • You don't need to have the two calls to STDIN. :) Sep 29, 2009 at 23:43
  • WAT? is that a hack to avoid the recursive calls overloading the stack?
    – Ape-inago
    Nov 18, 2009 at 19:27
  • Yes, goto (and redo) version will prevent overloading the stack. Nov 20, 2009 at 12:52
4

The correct way to call the routine is

goto &some_routine;

...because what you have is a tail call - it's the last thing you do in your function. If you call it normally you eat a stack frame for each call and memory allocation goes up. Called like this, you re-use the same stack frame. From your perspective as a programmer, this is the same as

return some_routine(@_);

but without eating memory.

This only works for routines that call themselves as the last thing they do - in other cases, you should indeed be switching to the while loop that other people suggest (and, for code attractiveness, you may want to do that anyway).

3
  • There's no need for the goto here. Sep 29, 2009 at 23:44
  • Brad: some_routine() was correct because his original call has no arguments. Your edit (some_routine(@_)) is more widely applicable but not actually required here.
    – ijw
    Sep 30, 2009 at 13:06
  • brian: TCO works by default then? If so, then apparently most of the answers here have the same problem and this is widely misunderstood...
    – ijw
    Sep 30, 2009 at 13:07
2

EDIT: For a variety of reasons (style, performance, etc...), I would strongly advise not do a recursive call here, though, but rather check it in a while loop.

[Original answerer's disclaimer] "From a style perspective, I would not do a recursive call here, though, but rather check it in a while loop, but I guess to a degree, that's a matter of taste as well."

As far as using recursion, as an example, you can just call the function from within the function, like so:

sub get_positive_number {
    print "Please enter a positive number: ";
    my $number = <STDIN>;
    chomp $number;
    if ($number > 0) {
        return $number;
    }
    else {
        return get_positive_number();
    }
}

my $result = get_positive_number();
print "result: $result\n";
0
2
my $value;
until(defined $value = get_value()) {
  print"you didn't enter a valid value\n";
}

sub get_value {
 print "Enter a number to select   (1) Apple (2) Mango (3) grapes:"
    $value=<STDIN>;
    if($value =~ /[1-3]/ ) {
        return $value;
    } else {
        return undef;     
    }
}
1
  • thanks for the edit, I can't believe I missed those. Thats what I get for not typing this up in a highlighting text editor.
    – Ape-inago
    Oct 5, 2009 at 12:27
1

Use IO::Prompt module.

With it you can write it like this:

use IO::Prompt;
my @choices = qw( Apple Mango Grapes );
my $answer = prompt("Select :", "-menu" => \@choices);
print $answer;
0

Your input is not eq "y" but "y\n".

If you change the line to if ($choice =~ /^[Yy]/) this will make sure you catch the Y at the start of the input and not worry about y or yes or Y or Yes.

As a help, you should use <STDIN> instead of STDIN alone. Always add use strict; use warnings; at the top. This makes sure you need to define $value and $choice using:

my $value = '';
my $choice = '';

As other people have mentioned. This is probably more straightforward as a loop.

#!/usr/bin/env perl
use strict;
use warnings;

some_routine();

sub some_routine {    
    my $value = '';
    my $choice = '';
    print "Enter a number to select   (1) Apple (2) Mango (3) grapes:";
    $value = <STDIN>;
    if($value !~ /[1-3]/ ) {
        print "The input is not valid!";
        print "Do you want to continue selecting a fruit again (Y or N)?";
        $choice = <STDIN>;
        if( $choice =~ /[Yy]/) {
            some_routine();
          } else {
            exit;
        }
    }
}
0

What I use is a simple goto:

START:
print "\n Name of the country (any one out of: china, japan or tokyo): ";
my $country_name = <>;
chomp($country_name);

unless ($country_name eq "china" || $country_name eq "japan" ||
    $country_name eq "tokyo") {
    print "\n Invalid country name entered. Please try again. \n";
    goto START;
}

This is a very naive way but works for the beginners.

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