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Chapter 11: Perl Scripting

Chapter 11: Perl Scripting. Off Larry’s Wall. In this chapter …. Background Terminology Syntax Variables Control Structures File Manipulation Regular Expressions. Perl. Practical Extraction and Report Language Developed by Larry Wall in 1987

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Chapter 11: Perl Scripting

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  1. Chapter 11:Perl Scripting Off Larry’s Wall

  2. In this chapter … • Background • Terminology • Syntax • Variables • Control Structures • File Manipulation • Regular Expressions

  3. Perl • Practical Extraction and Report Language • Developed by Larry Wall in 1987 • Originally created for data processing and report generation • Elements of C, AWK, sed, scripting • Add-on modules and third party code make it a more general programming language

  4. Features • C-derived syntax • Ambiguous variables & dynamic typing • Singular and plural variables • Informal, easy to use • Many paradigms – procedural, functional, object-oriented • Extensive third party modules

  5. Features, con’t • As elegant as you make it • Do What I Mean intelligence • Fast, easy, down and dirty coding • Interpreted, not compiled • perldoc – man pages for Perl modules

  6. Terminology • Module – one stand alone piece of code • Distribution – set of modules • Package – a namespace for one or more distributions • Package variable – declared in package, accessible between modules • Lexical variable – local variable (scope)

  7. Terminology, con’t • Scalar – variable that contains only one value (number, string, etc) • Composite – variable made of one or more scalars • List – series of one or more scalars • e.g. (2, 4, ‘Zach’) • Array – composite variable containing a list

  8. Invoking Perl • perl –e ‘text of perl program’ • perl perl_script • Make perl script executable and you can execute the script itself • i.e. ./my_script.pl • Common file extension .pl not required • Like other scripts start with #! to specify execution program

  9. Invoking Perl, con’t • Use perl –w to display warnings • Will warn if using undeclared variables • Instead of –w, use warnings; in your script • Same effect • Usually you’ll find perl in /usr/bin/perl

  10. Syntax • Each perl statement ended by semicolon (;) • Can have multiple statements per line • Whitespace ignored largely • Except within quoted strings • Double quotes allow interpretation of variables and special characters (like \n) • Single quotes don’t (just like the shell)

  11. Syntax, con’t • Forward slash used to delimit regular expressions (e.g. /.*sh?/) • Backslash used for escape characters • E.g. \n – newline, \t – tab • Lines beginning with # are ignored as comments

  12. Output • Old way • print what_to_print; • Concatenate • print item_1, item_2 • Want a newline? • print what_to_print, “\n” • New way • say what_to_print • Automatically adds newline

  13. Output, con’t • what_to_print can be many things • Quoted string – “Here’s some text” • Variables - $myvar • Result of a function – toupper($myvar) • A combination • print “Sub Tot: $total \n”, “Tax: $total*$tax \n” • Want to display an error and exit? • die “Uh-oh!\n”;

  14. Variables • Perl variables can be singular or plural • Data typing done dynamically at runtime • Three types • Scalar (singular) • Array (plural) • Hash a.k.a. Associative Arrays (plural) • Variable names are case sensitive • Can contain letters, numbers, underscore

  15. Variables, con’t • Each type of variable starts with a different special character to mark type • By default all variables are package in scope • To make lexical, preface declaration with my keyword • Lexical variables override package variables • Include use strict; to not allow use of undeclared variables

  16. Variables, con’t • We’ve already covered use warnings; • Undeclared variables, if referenced, have a default value of undef • Equates to 0 or null string • Can check by using defined() function • $. is equal to the line number you’re on • $_ is the default operand – ‘it’

  17. Scalars • Singular, holds one value, either string or number • Must be preceded with $ i.e. $myvar • Perl will automatically cast between strings and numbers • Will treat as a number or string, whichever is appropriate in context

  18. Arrays • Plural, containing an ordered list of scalars • Zero-based indexing • Dynamic size and allocation • Begin with @ e.g. @myarray • @variablereferences entire array • To reference a single element (which would be a scalar, right?) $variable[index]

  19. Arrays, con’t • $#arrayreturns the index of the last element • Zero based – this means it’s one less than the size of the array • @array[x..y] returns a ‘slice’ or sublist • Printing arrays • Array enclosed in double quotes prints space delimited list • Not in quotes all entries concatenated

  20. Arrays, con’t • Arrays can be treated like FIFO queues • shift(@array) – pop first element off • push(@array, scalar) – push element on at end • Use splice to combine arrays • splice(@array,offset,length,@otherarray)

  21. Hashes • Plural, contain an array of key-value pairs • Prefix with % i.e. %myhash • Keys are strings, act as indexes to array • Each key must be unique, returns one value • Unordered • Optimized from random access • Keys don’t need quotes unless there are spaces

  22. Hashes, con’t • Element access • $hashvar{index} = value • e.g. $myvar{boat} =“tuna”; print $myvar{boat}; • %hashvar = ( key => value, …); • e.g. %myvar = ( boat => “tuna”, 4 => “fish”); • Get array of keys or values • keys(%hashvar) • values(%hashvar)

  23. Evaluating Expressions • Most control structures use an expression to evaluate whether they are run • Perl uses different comparison operators for strings and numbers • Also uses the same file operators (existence, access, etc) that bash uses

  24. Expressions • Numeric operators • ==, !=, <, >, <=, >= • <=> returns 0 if equal, 1 if >, -1 if < • String Operators • eq, ne, lt, gt, le, ge • cmp same as <=>

  25. Control Structures • if (expr) {…} • unless (expr) {…} • if (expr) {…} else {…} • if (expr) {…} elsif (expr) {…} … else {…} • while (expr) {…} • until (expr) {…}

  26. Control Structures, con’t • for and foreach are interchangeble • Syntax 1 • Similar to bash for…in structure • foreach [var] (list) {…} • If var not defined, $_ assumed • For each loop iteration, the next value from list is populated in var

  27. Control Structures, con’t • for/foreach Syntax 2 • Similar to C’s for loop • foreach (expr1; expr2; expr3) {…} • expr1 sets initial condition • expr2 is the terminal condition • expr3 is the incrementor

  28. Control Structures, con’t • Short-circuiting loops • Use last to break out of loop altogether • Same as bash’s break • Use next to skip to the next iteration of the loop • Same as bash’s continue

  29. Handles • A handle is essentially a variable linked to a file or process • Perl automatically opens handles for the default streams • STDIN, STDOUT, STDERR • You can open additional handles • To a file for input/output/appending • To a process for input/output

  30. Handles, con’t • Basic syntax • open(handle, [‘mode’], “ref”); • handle is a variable to reference the handle • mode can be many things • Simple cases: <, >, >>, | • Input (<) implied if omitted • ref is what to open – file or process • mode and ref can be combined as one string

  31. Handles, con’t • Once open access via handle variable • Output • print handle “what to print” • Input • $var = <handle> gets one line of input • Use <handle> as a loop condition to read input one line at a time, populating $_

  32. Handles, con’t • <> - magic handle, pulls from STDIN or command line arguments to perl • Line of input contains EOL character • Use chomp($var) to remove it • Use chop($var) to remove the last character • When done close(handle); • Housekeeping, good coding practice • Perl actually closes all open handles for you

  33. Handles, con’t • Examples • open(my $INPUT, “/path/to/file”); • open(my $ERRLOG, “>>/var/log/errors”); • open(my $SORT, “| sort –n”); • open(my $ALIST, "grep \'^[Aa]\' /usr/share/dict/words|") • while(<INPUT>) { print $ERRLOG $_; }

  34. Regular Expressions • Recall Appendix A • Perl has a few unique features and caveats • Regular Expressions (RE) delimited by forward slash • Perl uses the =~ operator for RE matching • Ex. if ($myvar =~ /^T/) { …} # if myvar starts w/ T • To negate RE matching use !~ operator

  35. RE, con’t • =~ operator can also be used to do replacement • Ex. $result =~s/old/new/; • ‘old’ replaced with ‘new’ if matched • Remember, RE (esp. in Perl) are greedy • Will match longest possible match • Bracketed expressions don’t need to be escaped, just use parentheses

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