The keys and each functions give you the hash elements in a strange order, and you want them in the order in which you inserted them.
use Tie::IxHash; tie %HASH, "Tie::IxHash"; # manipulate %HASH @keys = keys %HASH; # @keys is in insertion order
Tie::IxHash makes keys, each, and values return the hash elements in the order they were added. This often removes the need to preprocess the hash keys with a complex sort comparison or maintain a distinct array containing the keys in the order they were inserted into the hash.
Tie::IxHash also provides an object-oriented interface to splice, push , pop, shift, unshift, keys, values, and delete, among others.
Here's an example, showing both keys and each:
# initialize
use Tie::IxHash;
tie %food_color, "Tie::IxHash";
$food_color{Banana} = "Yellow";
$food_color{Apple} = "Green";
$food_color{Lemon} = "Yellow";
print "In insertion order, the foods are:\n";
foreach $food (keys %food_color) {
print " $food\n";
}
print "Still in insertion order, the foods' colors are:\n";
while (( $food, $color ) = each %food_color ) {
print "$food is colored $color.\n";
}
In insertion order, the foods are:
Banana
Apple
Lemon
Still in insertion order, the foods' colors are:
Banana is colored Yellow.
Apple is colored Green.
Lemon is colored Yellow.The documentation for the CPAN module Tie::IxHash; Recipe 13.15