Why not adopt me?
NAME
List::MapList - map lists through a list of subs, not just one
VERSION
version 1.122
SYNOPSIS
Contrived heterogenous transform
use List::MapList;
my $code = [
sub { $_ + 1 },
sub { $_ + 2 },
sub { $_ + 3 },
sub { $_ + 4 }
];
my @mapped_1 = maplist( $code, qw(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9));
# @mapped_1 is qw(2 4 6 8)
my @mapped_2 = mapcycle( $code, qw(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9));
# @mapped_2 is qw(2 4 6 8 6 8 10 12 13)
Ultra-secure partial rot13:
my $rotsome = [
sub { tr/a-zA-Z/n-za-mN-ZA-M/; $_ },
sub { tr/a-zA-Z/n-za-mN-ZA-M/; $_ },
sub { $_ },
];
my $plaintext = "Too many secrets.";
my $cyphertext = join '', mapcycle($rotsome, split //, $plaintext);
DESCRIPTION
List::MapList provides methods to map a list through a list of transformations, instead of just one. The transformations are not chained together on each element; only one is used, alternating sequentially.
Here's a contrived example: given the transformations { $_ = 0 }
and { $_ = 1 }
, the list (1, 2, 3, "Good morning", undef)
would become (0, 1, 0, 1, 0)
or, without cycling, (0, 1)
.;
(I use this code to process a part number in which each digit maps to a set of product attributes.)
FUNCTIONS
- maplist
-
my @results = maplist(\@coderefs, LIST);
This routine acts much like a normal
map
, but uses the list of code references in$coderefs
in parallel with the list members. First first code reference is used for the first list member, the next for the second, and so on. Once the last code reference has been used, all further elements will be mapped to()
. - mapcycle
-
my @results = mapcycle($coderefs, LIST);
This routine is identical to
maplist
, but will cycle through the passed coderefs over and over as needed.
TODO
...nothing?
AUTHOR
Ricardo SIGNES <rjbs@cpan.org<gt>
COPYRIGHT
This code is Copyright 2004-2006, Ricardo SIGNES. It is free software, available under the same terms as Perl itself.