108

Is there an easy way to print out a Perl array with commas in between each element?

Writing a for loop to do it is pretty easy but not quite elegant....if that makes sense.

11 Answers 11

163

Just use join():

# assuming @array is your array:
print join(", ", @array);
5
  • 9
    Or, if you want to be really dirty: {local $,=', ';print @array}.
    – musiKk
    Apr 21, 2011 at 7:57
  • 10
    There's more than one way to do it.. but this is the way that doesn't make the person maintaining the code after you hate you. Yes, perldoc perlvar exists, but I'd rather glance over "join ', ' @array" than hit up perlvar every other line to figure out what all the esoteric variables are doing.
    – Oesor
    Apr 21, 2011 at 14:17
  • @Oesor: That's why I called it dirty. But well, looking at the other answers, I'm not really the worst offender. :)
    – musiKk
    Apr 21, 2011 at 20:03
  • @musiKK I like it! It's something I'd use if I wanted to puzzle my fellow co workers. :)
    – Alex
    Apr 21, 2011 at 20:06
  • 4
    This worked really nicely for printing the directory contents. print "current directory contains " . join(', ', <*>) . "\n";
    – Randall
    Apr 4, 2013 at 19:03
37

You can use Data::Dump:

use Data::Dump qw(dump);
my @a = (1, [2, 3], {4 => 5});
dump(@a);

Produces:

"(1, [2, 3], { 4 => 5 })"
2
  • 2
    On Ubuntu/Mint, install the libdata-dump-perl package. Apr 24, 2013 at 20:10
  • 2
    Best answer here! Works with multidimensional arrays too. Most flexible. May 14, 2015 at 22:27
20

If you're coding for the kind of clarity that would be understood by someone who is just starting out with Perl, the traditional this construct says what it means, with a high degree of clarity and legibility:

$string = join ', ', @array;
print "$string\n";

This construct is documented in perldoc -fjoin.

However, I've always liked how simple $, makes it. The special variable $" is for interpolation, and the special variable $, is for lists. Combine either one with dynamic scope-constraining 'local' to avoid having ripple effects throughout the script:

use 5.012_002;
use strict;
use warnings;

my @array = qw/ 1 2 3 4 5 /;

{
    local $" = ', ';
    print "@array\n"; # Interpolation.
}

OR with $,:

use feature q(say);
use strict;
use warnings;

my @array = qw/ 1 2 3 4 5 /;
{
    local $, = ', ';
    say @array; # List
}

The special variables $, and $" are documented in perlvar. The local keyword, and how it can be used to constrain the effects of altering a global punctuation variable's value is probably best described in perlsub.

Enjoy!

10

Also, you may want to try Data::Dumper. Example:

use Data::Dumper;

# simple procedural interface
print Dumper($foo, $bar);
1
  • 4
    Data::Dumper is a standard module and is installed along with Perl. To get a list of all the standard pragmatics and modules, see pelrdoc perlmodlib. Apr 21, 2011 at 13:25
7

For inspection/debugging check the Data::Printer module. It is meant to do one thing and one thing only:

display Perl variables and objects on screen, properly formatted (to be inspected by a human)

Example usage:

use Data::Printer;  
p @array;  # no need to pass references

The code above might output something like this (with colors!):

   [
       [0] "a",
       [1] "b",
       [2] undef,
       [3] "c",
   ]
1
  • Under Ubuntu one can install the libdata-printer-perl package.
    – planetp
    Feb 6, 2019 at 14:04
4

You can simply print it.

@a = qw(abc def hij);

print "@a";

You will got:

abc def hij
1
  • 2
    You have commas in the print because they are in each element of the array. You really should declare use warnings; and see what it says.
    – Toto
    Apr 21, 2011 at 8:29
2
# better than Dumper --you're ready for the WWW....

use JSON::XS;
print encode_json \@some_array
1

Using Data::Dumper :

use strict;
use Data::Dumper;

my $GRANTstr = 'SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, LOCK TABLES, EXECUTE, TRIGGER';
$GRANTstr    =~ s/, /,/g;
my @GRANTs   = split /,/ , $GRANTstr;

print Dumper(@GRANTs) . "===\n\n";

print Dumper(\@GRANTs) . "===\n\n";

print Data::Dumper->Dump([\@GRANTs], [qw(GRANTs)]);

Generates three different output styles:

$VAR1 = 'SELECT';
$VAR2 = 'INSERT';
$VAR3 = 'UPDATE';
$VAR4 = 'DELETE';
$VAR5 = 'LOCK TABLES';
$VAR6 = 'EXECUTE';
$VAR7 = 'TRIGGER';
===

$VAR1 = [
          'SELECT',
          'INSERT',
          'UPDATE',
          'DELETE',
          'LOCK TABLES',
          'EXECUTE',
          'TRIGGER'
        ];
===

$GRANTs = [
            'SELECT',
            'INSERT',
            'UPDATE',
            'DELETE',
            'LOCK TABLES',
            'EXECUTE',
            'TRIGGER'
          ];
1

This might not be what you're looking for, but here's something I did for an assignment:

$" = ", ";
print "@ArrayName\n";
1
1

Map can also be used, but sometimes hard to read when you have lots of things going on.

map{ print "element $_\n" }   @array; 
1

I've not tried to run below, though. I think this's a tricky way.

map{print $_;} @array;

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