Hi
listanand,
Here's one way you could do it with a reference to a hash of array refs:
use strict;
use warnings;
use Data::Dumper;
my @array_names = qw (a b c d e f);
my $h_arrays = { };
for my $name (@array_names) {
$h_arrays->{$name} = [ $name ];
}
printf "I've now got these arrays in \$h_arrays: %s\n", Dumper($h_arr
+ays);
__END__
Output:
I've now got these arrays in $h_arrays: $VAR1 = {
'e' => [
'e'
],
'c' => [
'c'
],
'a' => [
'a'
],
'b' => [
'b'
],
'd' => [
'd'
],
'f' => [
'f'
]
};
I'm fond of hash references, so I'd do it that way. More simply, though, you could use a hash (instead of hash references), containing the array references:
use strict;
use warnings;
use Data::Dumper;
my @array_names = qw (a b c d e f);
my %arrays = ( );
for my $name (@array_names) {
$arrays{$name} = [ $name ];
}
printf "I've now got these arrays: %s\n", Dumper(\%arrays);
s''(q.S:$/9=(T1';s;(..)(..);$..=substr+crypt($1,$2),2,3;eg;print$..$/
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