Hash::Merge(3) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Hash::Merge(3) |
Hash::Merge - Merges arbitrarily deep hashes into a single hash
my %a = ( 'foo' => 1, 'bar' => [qw( a b e )], 'querty' => { 'bob' => 'alice' }, ); my %b = ( 'foo' => 2, 'bar' => [qw(c d)], 'querty' => { 'ted' => 'margeret' }, ); my %c = %{ merge( \%a, \%b ) }; Hash::Merge::set_behavior('RIGHT_PRECEDENT'); # This is the same as above Hash::Merge::add_behavior_spec( { 'SCALAR' => { 'SCALAR' => sub { $_[1] }, 'ARRAY' => sub { [ $_[0], @{ $_[1] } ] }, 'HASH' => sub { $_[1] }, }, 'ARRAY' => { 'SCALAR' => sub { $_[1] }, 'ARRAY' => sub { [ @{ $_[0] }, @{ $_[1] } ] }, 'HASH' => sub { $_[1] }, }, 'HASH' => { 'SCALAR' => sub { $_[1] }, 'ARRAY' => sub { [ values %{ $_[0] }, @{ $_[1] } ] }, 'HASH' => sub { Hash::Merge::_merge_hashes( $_[0], $_[1] ) }, }, }, 'My Behavior', ); # Also there is OO interface. my $merger = Hash::Merge->new('LEFT_PRECEDENT'); my %c = %{ $merger->merge( \%a, \%b ) }; # All behavioral changes (e.g. $merge->set_behavior(...)), called on an object remain specific to that object # The legacy "Global Setting" behavior is respected only when new called as a non-OO function. # re-use globally specified behavior my $merger = Hash::Merge->new(); $merger->add_behavior_spec(Hash::Merge::get_behavior_spec("My Behavior"), "My Behavior"); my %c = %{ $merger->merge( \%a, \%b ) }; # re-use externally specified behavior use Hash::Merge::Extra (); my $merger = Hash::Merge->new(); $merger->add_behavior_spec(Hash::Merge::Extra::L_REPLACE, "L_REPLACE"); my %c = %{ $merger->merge( \%a, \%b ) };
Hash::Merge merges two arbitrarily deep hashes into a single hash. That is, at any level, it will add non-conflicting key-value pairs from one hash to the other, and follows a set of specific rules when there are key value conflicts (as outlined below). The hash is followed recursively, so that deeply nested hashes that are at the same level will be merged when the parent hashes are merged. Please note that self-referencing hashes, or recursive references, are not handled well by this method.
Values in hashes are considered to be either ARRAY references, HASH references, or otherwise are treated as SCALARs. By default, the data passed to the merge function will be cloned using the Clone module; however, if necessary, this behavior can be changed to use as many of the original values as possible. (See "set_clone_behavior").
Because there are a number of possible ways that one may want to merge values when keys are conflicting, Hash::Merge provides several preset methods for your convenience, as well as a way to define you own. These are (currently):
The values buried in the left hash will never be lost; any values that can be added from the right hash will be attempted.
my $merge = Hash::Merge->new(); my $merge = Hash::Merge->new('LEFT_PRECEDENT'); $merge->set_behavior('LEFT_PRECEDENT'); Hash::Merge::set_behavior('LEFT_PRECEDENT');
my $merge = Hash::Merge->new('RIGHT_PRECEDENT'); $merge->set_behavior('RIGHT_PRECEDENT'); Hash::Merge::set_behavior('RIGHT_PRECEDENT');
my $merge = Hash::Merge->new('STORAGE_PRECEDENT'); $merge->set_behavior('STORAGE_PRECEDENT'); Hash::Merge::set_behavior('STORAGE_PRECEDENT');
my $merge = Hash::Merge->new('RETAINMENT_PRECEDENT'); $merge->set_behavior('RETAINMENT_PRECEDENT'); Hash::Merge::set_behavior('RETAINMENT_PRECEDENT');
Specific descriptions of how these work are detailed below.
%spec = ( ...SCALAR => { ARRAY => sub { [ $_[0], @$_[1] ] }, ... } } );
Note that you can import _hashify and _merge_hashes into your program's namespace with the 'custom' tag.
If no such name is known referring to an behavior spec, nothing is returned.
Here is the specifics on how the current internal behaviors are called, and what each does. Assume that the left value is given as $a, and the right as $b (these are either scalars or appropriate references)
LEFT TYPE RIGHT TYPE LEFT_PRECEDENT RIGHT_PRECEDENT SCALAR SCALAR $a $b SCALAR ARRAY $a ( $a, @$b ) SCALAR HASH $a %$b ARRAY SCALAR ( @$a, $b ) $b ARRAY ARRAY ( @$a, @$b ) ( @$a, @$b ) ARRAY HASH ( @$a, values %$b ) %$b HASH SCALAR %$a $b HASH ARRAY %$a ( values %$a, @$b ) HASH HASH merge( %$a, %$b ) merge( %$a, %$b ) LEFT TYPE RIGHT TYPE STORAGE_PRECEDENT RETAINMENT_PRECEDENT SCALAR SCALAR $a ( $a ,$b ) SCALAR ARRAY ( $a, @$b ) ( $a, @$b ) SCALAR HASH %$b merge( hashify( $a ), %$b ) ARRAY SCALAR ( @$a, $b ) ( @$a, $b ) ARRAY ARRAY ( @$a, @$b ) ( @$a, @$b ) ARRAY HASH %$b merge( hashify( @$a ), %$b ) HASH SCALAR %$a merge( %$a, hashify( $b ) ) HASH ARRAY %$a merge( %$a, hashify( @$b ) ) HASH HASH merge( %$a, %$b ) merge( %$a, %$b )
(*) note that merge calls _merge_hashes, hashify calls _hashify.
Michael K. Neylon <mneylon-pm@masemware.com>, Daniel Muey <dmuey@cpan.org>, Jens Rehsack <rehsack@cpan.org>, Stefan Hermes <hermes@cpan.org>
Copyright (c) 2001,2002 Michael K. Neylon. All rights reserved. Copyright (c) 2013-2017 Jens Rehsack. All rights reserved. Copyright (c) 2017 Stefan Hermes. All rights reserved.
This library is free software. You can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
2018-03-09 | perl v5.34.0 |