Re: Random field sequence tips

2001-07-09 Thread Abdulaziz Ghuloum
Hello The easiest way to do this is using hash slices. Let me explain. my %hash = (); # creates an empty hash $hash{name} = 'Aziz';# set the name $hash{id} = 512; #set the id $hash{bdate} = '12/3/1976/'; #set the bdate or, you can do this: %hash = (name => 'Aziz', id => 5

RE: Re: Random field sequence tips

2001-07-09 Thread paul
In reply-to Michael Fowler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> on Mon Jul 9 13:06:42 2001 >On Mon, Jul 09, 2001 at 12:26:48PM +0100, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: >> I have a text file produced by another system. The fields are semi-colon >> delimited, and the first line is a list of the fields, a header record, >>

Re: Random field sequence tips

2001-07-09 Thread Michael Fowler
On Mon, Jul 09, 2001 at 12:26:48PM +0100, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > I have a text file produced by another system. The fields are semi-colon > delimited, and the first line is a list of the fields, a header record, > also semi-colon delimited. You should investigate DBD::CSV. It has options fo

Random field sequence tips

2001-07-09 Thread paul
Tip request... I have a text file produced by another system. The fields are semi-colon delimited, and the first line is a list of the fields, a header record, also semi-colon delimited. The trick with this file is that each time the file is produced, the fields are not necessarily in the sa