You want a function to return more than one array or hash, but the return list flattens into just one long list of scalars.
Return references to the hashes or arrays:
($array_ref, $hash_ref) = somefunc( ); sub somefunc { my @array; my %hash; # ... return ( \@array, \%hash ); }
Just as all arguments collapse into one flat list of scalars, return values do, too. Functions that want to return multiple, distinct arrays or hashes need to return those by reference, and the caller must be prepared to receive references. If a function wants to return three separate hashes, for example, it should use one of the following:
sub fn { ..... return (\%a, \%b, \%c); # or return \(%a, %b, %c); # same thing }
The caller must expect a list of hash references returned by the function. It cannot just assign to three hashes.
(%h0, %h1, %h2) = fn( ); # WRONG! @array_of_hashes = fn( ); # eg: $array_of_hashes[2]{"keystring"} ($r0, $r1, $r2) = fn( ); # eg: $r2->{"keystring"}
The general discussions on references in Chapter 11, and in Chapter 8 of Programming Perl; Recipe 10.5
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