You need to know whether a hash has a particular key, regardless of any possible associated value.
Use the exists
function.
# does %HASH have a value for $KEY ? if (exists($HASH{$KEY})) { # it exists } else { # it doesn't }
This code uses exists
to check whether a key is in the %food_color
hash:
# %food_color per the introduction foreach $name ("Banana", "Martini") { if (exists $food_color{$name}) { print "$name is a food.\n"; } else { print "$name is a drink.\n"; } }
Banana is a food.
Martini is a drink.
The exists
function tests whether a key is in the hash. It doesn't test whether the value corresponding to that key is defined, nor whether the value is true or false. We may be splitting hairs, but problems caused by confusing existence, definedness, and truth can multiply like rabbits. Take this code:
%age = (); $age{"Toddler"} = 3; $age{"Unborn"} = 0; $age{"Phantasm"} = undef; foreach $thing ("Toddler", "Unborn", "Phantasm", "Relic") { print "$thing: "; print "Exists " if exists $age{$thing}; print "Defined " if defined $age{$thing}; print "True " if $age{$thing}; print "\n"; }
Toddler: Exists Defined True
Unborn: Exists Defined
Phantasm: Exists
Relic:
$age{"Toddler"}
passes the existence, definedness, and truth tests. It exists because we gave "Toddler"
a value in the hash, it's defined because that value isn't undef
, and it's true because the value isn't one of Perl's false values.
$age{"Unborn"}
passes only the existence and definedness tests. It exists because we gave "Unborn"
a value in the hash, and it's defined because that value isn't undef
. It isn't true, however, because 0
is one of Perl's false values.
$age{"Phantasm"}
passes only the existence test. It exists because we gave "Phantasm"
a value in the hash. Because that value was undef
, it doesn't pass the definedness test. Because undef
is also one of Perl's false values, it doesn't pass the truth test either.
$age{"Relic"}
passes none of the tests. We didn't put a value for "Relic"
into the hash, so the existence test fails. Because we didn't put a value in, $age{"Relic"}
is undef
whenever we try to access it. We know from "Phantasm"
that undef
fails the definedness and truth tests.
Sometimes it's useful to store undef
in a hash. This indicates "I've seen this key, but it didn't have a meaningful value associated with it." Take, for instance, a program to look up file sizes given a list of files as input. This version tries to skip files we've seen before, but it doesn't skip zero-length files, and it doesn't skip files that we've seen before but don't exist.
%size = (); while (<>) { chomp; next if $size{$_}; # WRONG attempt to skip $size{$_} = -s $_; }
If we change the incorrect line to call exists
, we also skip files that couldn't be stat
ted, instead of repeatedly trying (and failing) to look them up:
next if exists $size{$_};
The food and drink code above assumes that which is not food must be a drink. This is a dangerous assumption to make in the real world.
The exists
and defined
functions in perlfunc (1) and Chapter 3 of Programming Perl; the discussion of truth in the "Scalar Values" section of perldata (1), and the "Boolean Context" section of Chapter 2 of Programming Perl.
Copyright © 2001 O'Reilly & Associates. All rights reserved.