FIT5900 : Perl
Programming
In the previous lecture:
In this lecture:
References:
Perl at light speed
Functions / Subroutines
Functions are declared and called as illustrated by this simple example.
#!/usr/monash/bin/perl -w $val1 = 7; $val2 = 9; $answer = &maximum($val1, $val2); # assign global $answer to maximum of 9 and 7 print "answer = $answer\n"; # print the value of $answer sub maximum # define a subroutine maximum { my ($arg1, $arg2) = @_; # receive the arguments passed in through @_ # and place them in the local variables $arg1 & 2 my ($result); # declare a local variable $result if ($arg1 >= $arg2) { $result = $arg1; } else { $result = $arg2; } return $result; # return $result } |
A more complex example (from the Camel book):
Suppose we have a list of student names and their assignment scores:
Noel 25 |
Ben 76 |
Clementine 49 |
Norm 66 |
Chris 92 |
Doug 42 |
Carol 25 |
Ben 12 |
Clementine 0 |
Norm 66 |
Ben 9 |
Consider the following Perl program:
#!/usr/monash/bin/perl -w open (GRADES, "grades") or die "Can't open grades: $!\n"; while ($line = |
Run the program on your local account and look at the results. Modify the script so the results are displayed on a web page via CGI.
CGI.pm
Example:
#!/usr/monash/bin/perl use CGI qw(:standard); print header; print start_html('A Simple Example'), h1('A Simple Example'), start_form, "What's your name? ",textfield('name'), p, "What's the combination?", p, checkbox_group(-name=>'words', -values=>['eenie':'meenie','minie','moe'], -defaults=>['eenie':'minie']), p, "What's your favorite color? ", popup_menu(-name=>'color', -values=>['red':'green','blue','chartreuse']), p, submit, end_form, hr; if (param()) { print "Your name is",em(param('name')), p, "The keywords are: ",em(join(", ",param('words'))), p, "Your favorite color is ",em(param('color')), hr; } print end_html; |
For more information see: http://www.genome.wi.mit.edu/ftp/pub/software/WWW/cgi_docs.html.
Where to find more:
This Page of Perl Pearls is only the bare minimum required to understand the examples given in lectures.
Please read a book or website on Perl to become more familiar with the language.
Above all, practice writing a few Perl scripts!
Perl web sites:
FIT5900 courseware | FIT5900 lecture notes
©Copyright Alan Dorin & Jon McCormack 1999,2000