How does double arrow (=>) operator work in Perl?

Lazer picture Lazer · Nov 4, 2010 · Viewed 25.2k times · Source

I know about the hash use of the => operator, like this

$ cat array.pl
%ages = ('Martin' => 28,
         'Sharon' => 35,
         'Rikke' => 29,);

print "Rikke is $ages{Rikke} years old\n";
$ perl array.pl
Rikke is 29 years old
$

and I thought it was just syntax to initialize hashes, but in answers to How can I qualify a variable as const/final in Perl?, => has been used like this

use Readonly;
Readonly my $infilename => "input_56_12.txt";

What exactly does => mean? Are there more ways in which => can be used?

Answer

Ben Jackson picture Ben Jackson · Nov 4, 2010

The => operator in perl is basically the same as comma. The only difference is that if there's an unquoted word on the left, it's treated like a quoted word. So you could have written Martin => 28 which would be the same as 'Martin', 28.

You can make a hash from any even-length list, which is all you're doing in your example.

Your Readonly example is taking advantage of Perl's flexibility with subroutine arguments by omitting the parenthesis. It is equivalent to Readonly(my $infilename, "input_56_12.txt"). Readonly is a function exported by the Readonly module which takes two arguments: a reference, and a value. The internals of Readonly are worthy of another question if you want to understand them.

Here's an example of using it as a comma in an unexpected way:

$ perl -e 'print hello => "world\n"'
helloworld