I want to use a hash in an expression. No problem:
use strict;
use warnings;
my %h = (a=>1, b=>2);
my $h = $h{a};
print "h='$h'\n";
But since I will refer to it only once, I don't want to name it. Naively substituting the hash content for $h doesn't work. The following code produces a syntax error on line 3 at "){":
use strict;
use warnings;
my $x = (a=>1, b=>2){a};
print "x='$x'\n";
I know that the following is the way to accomplish what I need:
use struct;
use warnings;
my $y = {a=>1, b=>2}->{a};
print "y='$y'\n";
Why doesn't the second example work?
EDIT 1: This is a MVCE. In real life, my hash key ('a' in this example) is not a constant.
EDIT 2: A little more about my motive: I don't want an unnecessary variable in scope in my code, so if I were to restrict the scope of %h to where it really belongs, I would have this:
use strict;
use warnings;
my $h;
{
my %h = (a=>1, b=>2);
$h = $h{a};
}
print "h='$h'\n";
I don't want to leave %h in scope for more code than I need, but it's also clunky to write the code segment with the extra block for scoping. This is why I was looking for a clean one-line way to make the assignment.
'a', 1, 'b', 2
.my $x = 1;
?my $y = {a=>1, b=>2}->{a};
is bad coding style and would address the OP's actual problem (assuming the OP explains it).{a => 1, b => 2}->{a}
is one way.${{a => 1, b => 2}}{b}
is another.