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Perl Tutorial

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Title: Perl Tutorial


1
Perl Tutorial
2
Why Perl?
  • Perl is built around regular expressions
  • REs are good for string processing
  • Therefore Perl is a good scripting language
  • Perl is especially popular for CGI scripts
  • Perl makes full use of the power of UNIX
  • Short Perl programs can be very short
  • Perl is designed to make the easy jobs easy,
    without making the difficult jobs impossible. --
    Larry Wall, Programming Perl

3
Why not Perl?
  • Perl is very UNIX-oriented
  • Perl is available on other platforms...
  • ...but isnt always fully implemented there
  • However, Perl is often the best way to get some
    UNIX capabilities on less capable platforms
  • Perl does not scale well to large programs
  • Weak subroutines, heavy use of global variables
  • Perls syntax is not particularly appealing

4
What is a scripting language?
  • Operating systems can do many things
  • copy, move, create, delete, compare files
  • execute programs, including compilers
  • schedule activities, monitor processes, etc.
  • A command-line interface gives you access to
    these functions, but only one at a time
  • A scripting language is a wrapper language that
    integrates OS functions

5
Major scripting languages
  • UNIX has sh, Perl
  • Macintosh has AppleScript, Frontier
  • Windows has no major scripting languages
  • probably due to the weaknesses of DOS
  • Generic scripting languages include
  • Perl (most popular)
  • Tcl (easiest for beginners)
  • Python (new, Java-like, best for large programs)

6
Perl Example 1
!/usr/local/bin/perl Program to do the
obvious print 'Hello world.' Print a
message
7
Comments on Hello, World
  • Comments are to end of line
  • But the first line, !/usr/local/bin/perl, tells
    where to find the Perl compiler on your system
  • Perl statements end with semicolons
  • Perl is case-sensitive
  • Perl is compiled and run in a single operation

8
Perl Example 2
!/ex2/usr/bin/perl Remove blank lines from a
file Usage singlespace lt oldfile gt
newfile while (line ltSTDINgt) if (line
eq "\n") next print "line"
9
More Perl notes
  • On the UNIX command line
  • lt filename means to get input from this file
  • gt filename means to send output to this file
  • In Perl, ltSTDINgt is the input file, ltSTDOUTgt is
    the output file
  • Scalar variables start with
  • Scalar variables hold strings or numbers, and
    they are interchangeable
  • Examples
  • priority 9
  • priority '9'
  • Array variables start with _at_

10
Perl Example 3
!/usr/local/bin/perl Usage fixm ltfilenamesgt
Replace \r with \n -- replaces input
files foreach file (_at_ARGV) print
"Processing file\n" if (-e "fixm_temp")
die " File fixm_temp already exists!\n"
if (! -e file) die " No such file
file!\n" open DOIT, " tr \'\\015'
\'\\012' lt file gt fixm_temp" or die
" Can't tr '\015' '\012' lt file gt
fixm_temp \n" close DOIT open DOIT, "
mv -f fixm_temp file" or die " Can't mv -f
fixm_temp file\n" close DOIT
11
Comments on example 3
  • In Usage fixm ltfilenamesgt, the angle brackets
    just mean to supply a list of file names here
  • In UNIX text editors, the \r (carriage return)
    character usually shows up as M (hence the name
    fixm_temp)
  • The UNIX command tr '\015' '\012' replaces all
    \015 characters (\r) with \012 (\n) characters
  • The format of the open and close commands is
  • open fileHandle, fileName
  • close fileHandle, fileName
  • " tr \'\\015' \'\\012' lt file gt fixm_temp"
    says Take input from file, pipe it to the tr
    command, put the output on fixm_temp

12
Arithmetic in Perl
a 1 2 Add 1 and 2 and store in a a
3 - 4 Subtract 4 from 3 and store in
a a 5 6 Multiply 5 and 6 a 7 /
8 Divide 7 by 8 to give 0.875 a 9
10 Nine to the power of 10, that is, 910 a
5 2 Remainder of 5 divided by 2 a
Increment a and then return
it a Return a and then
increment it --a Decrement a
and then return it a-- Return a
and then decrement it
13
String and assignment operators
a b . c Concatenate b and c a b x
c b repeated c times a b
Assign b to a a b Add b to a a
- b Subtract b from a a . b
Append b onto a
14
Single and double quotes
  • a 'apples'
  • b 'bananas'
  • print a . ' and ' . b
  • prints apples and bananas
  • print 'a and b'
  • prints a and b
  • print "a and b"
  • prints apples and bananas

15
Arrays
  • _at_food ("apples", "bananas", "cherries")
  • But
  • print food1
  • prints "bananas"
  • _at_morefood ("meat", _at_food)
  • _at_morefood ("meat", "apples", "bananas",
    "cherries")
  • (a, b, c) (5, 10, 20)

16
push and pop
  • push adds one or more things to the end of a list
  • push (_at_food, "eggs", "bread")
  • push returns the new length of the list
  • pop removes and returns the last element
  • sandwich pop(_at_food)
  • len _at_food len gets length of _at_food
  • food returns index of last element

17
foreach
Visit each item in turn and call it
morsel foreach morsel (_at_food) print
"morsel\n" print "Yum yum\n"
18
Tests
  • Zero is false. This includes 0, '0', "0", '',
    ""
  • Anything not false is true
  • Use and ! for numbers, eq and ne for strings
  • , , and ! are and, or, and not, respectively.

19
for loops
  • for loops are just as in C or Java
  • for (i 0 i lt 10 i) print
    "i\n"

20
while loops
!/usr/local/bin/perl print "Password? " a
ltSTDINgt chop a Remove the
newline at end while (a ne "fred") print
"sorry. Again? " a ltSTDINgt chop
a
21
do..while and do..until loops
!/usr/local/bin/perl do print
"Password? " a ltSTDINgt chop
a while (a ne "fred")
22
if statements
if (a) print "The string is not
empty\n" else print "The string is
empty\n"
23
if - elsif statements
if (!a) print "The string is empty\n"
elsif (length(a) 1) print "The string
has one character\n" elsif (length(a) 2)
print "The string has two characters\n" else
print "The string has many characters\n"
24
Why Perl?
  • Two factors make Perl important
  • Pattern matching/string manipulation
  • Based on regular expressions (REs)
  • REs are similar in power to those in Formal
    Languages
  • but have many convenience features
  • Ability to execute UNIX commands
  • Less useful outside a UNIX environment

25
Basic pattern matching
  • sentence /the/
  • True if sentence contains "the"
  • sentence "The dog bites."if (sentence
    /the/) is false
  • because Perl is case-sensitive
  • ! is "does not contain"

26
RE special characters
. Any single character except a
newline The beginning of the line or
string The end of the line or
string Zero or more of the last
character One or more of the last
character ? Zero or one of the last
character
27
RE examples
. matches the entire string hi.bye
matches from "hi" to "bye" inclusive x y
matches x, one or more blanks, and y Dear
matches "Dear" only at beginning bags?
matches "bag" or "bags" hiss matches
"hiss", "hisss", "hissss", etc.
28
Square brackets
qjk Either q or j or k qjk
Neither q nor j nor k a-z Anything
from a to z inclusive a-z No lower
case letters a-zA-Z Any letter a-z
Any non-zero sequence of
lower case letters
29
More examples
aeiou matches one or more
vowels aeiou matches one or more
nonvowels 0-9 matches an unsigned
integer 0-9A-F matches a single hex
digit a-zA-Z matches any
letter a-zA-Z0-9_ matches identifiers
30
More special characters
\n A newline \t A tab \w Any
alphanumeric same as a-zA-Z0-9_ \W Any
non-word char same as a-zA-Z0-9_ \d Any
digit. The same as 0-9 \D Any non-digit.
The same as 0-9 \s Any whitespace
character\S Any non-whitespace character \b
A word boundary, outside only \B No
word boundary
31
Quoting special characters
\ Vertical bar \ An open square
bracket \) A closing parenthesis \
An asterisk \ A carat symbol \/ A
slash \\ A backslash
32
Alternatives and parentheses
jellycream Either jelly or cream (egle)gs
Either eggs or legs (da)
Either da or dada or
dadada or...
33
The _ variable
  • Often we want to process one string repeatedly
  • The _ variable holds the current string
  • If a subject is omitted, _ is assumed
  • Hence, the following are equivalent
  • if (sentence /under/)
  • _ sentence if (/under/) ...

34
Case-insensitive substitutions
  • s/london/London/i
  • case-insensitive substitution will replace
    london, LONDON, London, LoNDoN, etc.
  • You can combine global substitution with
    case-insensitive substitution
  • s/london/London/gi

35
Remembering patterns
  • Any part of the pattern enclosed in parentheses
    is assigned to the special variables 1, 2, 3,
    , 9
  • Numbers are assigned according to the left
    (opening) parentheses
  • "The moon is high" /The (.) is (.)/
  • Afterwards, 1 "moon" and 2 "high"

36
Dynamic matching
  • During the match, an early part of the match that
    is tentatively assigned to 1, 2, etc. can be
    referred to by \1, \2, etc.
  • Example
  • \b.\b matches a single word
  • /(\b.\b) \1/ matches repeated words
  • "Now is the the time" /(\b.\b) \1/
  • Afterwards, 1 "the"

37
tr
  • tr does character-by-character translation
  • tr returns the number of substitutions made
  • sentence tr/abc/edf/
  • replaces a with e, b with d, c with f
  • count (sentence tr///)
  • counts asterisks
  • tr/a-z/A-Z/
  • converts to all uppercase

38
split
  • split breaks a string into parts
  • info "CaineMichaelActor14, Leafy
    Drive"_at_personal split(//, info)
  • _at_personal ("Caine", "Michael", "Actor",
    "14, Leafy Drive")

39
Associative arrays
  • Associative arrays allow lookup by name rather
    than by index
  • Associative array names begin with
  • Example
  • fruit ("apples", "red", "bananas", "yellow",
    "cherries", "red")
  • Now, fruit"bananas" returns "yellow"
  • Note braces, not parentheses

40
Associative Arrays II
  • Can be converted to normal arrays_at_food
    fruit
  • You cannot index an associative array, but you
    can use the keys and values functions
  • foreach f (keys fruit) print ("The color
    of f is " . fruitf . "\n")

41
Calling subroutines
  • Assume you have a subroutine printargs that just
    prints out its arguments
  • Subroutine calls
  • printargs("perly", "king")
  • Prints "perly king"
  • printargs("frog", "and", "toad")
  • Prints "frog and toad"

42
Defining subroutines
  • Here's the definition of printargs
  • sub printargs print "_at__\n"
  • Where are the parameters?
  • Parameters are put in the array _at__ which has
    nothing to do with _

43
Returning a result
  • The value of a subroutine is the value of the
    last expression that was evaluated

sub maximum if (_0 gt _1)
_0 else _1
biggest maximum(37, 24)
44
Local variables
  • _at__ is local to the subroutine, and
  • so are _0, _1, _2,
  • local creates local variables

45
Example subroutine
sub inside local(a, b)
Make local variables (a,
b) (_0, _1) Assign values
a s/ //g
Strip spaces from b s/ //g
local variables (a
/b/ b /a/) Is b inside a

or a inside b? inside("lemon", "dole
money") true
46
Perl V
  • There are only a few differences between Perl 4
    and Perl 5
  • Perl 5 has modules
  • Perl 5 modules can be treated as classes
  • Perl 5 has auto variables

47
The End
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