You can use map
again to extract it. Don't be under any illusions though - it's still looping. It might be more elegant though:
for my $val ( map { values %$_ } values %dh ) {
#do stuff
}
This is more or less doing the same thing though - it's flattening your hash - getting the values
from %dh
- which will be a list of hash-refs - and then pulling the values
out of those. (I think this should do it, but without test data I can't tell you for sure).
Note - the return order from values
is undefined, so you'll get them in a randomish order. You can control ordering via keys
(and maybe sort
) if you're so inclined.
What map
does is simply evaluate a code block, and returns the results as a list. That's why map { $_ => 1 } qw ( one two three )
works - it's actually returning a pair of values, which when you assign it to a hash is treated as key-value pairs.
use Data::Dumper;
my @stuff = map { $_ => 1 } qw ( one two three );
print Dumper \@stuff;
my %hash = map { $_ => 1 } qw ( one two three );
print Dumper \%hash;
So - map
is returning 2 values here, which you could write as:
my @stuff = map { $_, 1 } qw ( one two three );
Because of course, =>
is really just a comma (with some extra functionality around quoting).
So when doing a dereference of an array, you can do the same - values
returns a list of values from each element in the map
.
For the sake of clarity:
use Data::Dumper;
my @stuff = ( [ 1, 2, 3 ], [4, 5, 6], [7, 8, 9] );
print Dumper \@stuff;
my @newstuff = map { @$_ } @stuff;
print Dumper \@newstuff;
Is doing essentially the same thing - traversing each of the hash references in @stuff
(because that's how multi-dimensional arrays are implemented in perl
) and then 'unpacks' them, returning the results.
map
andkeys
I guess, but I don't have the tuits to build a test case right now.