Reading and Writing Hash Records to Text Files

Problem

You want to read or write hash records to text files.

Solution

Use a simple file format with one field per line:

FieldName: Value

and separate records with blank lines.

Discussion

If you have an array of records that you'd like to store and retrieve from a text file, you can use a simple format based on mail headers. The format's simplicity requires that the keys have neither colons nor newlines, and the values not have newlines.

This code writes them out:

foreach $record (@Array_of_Records) {
 for $key (sort keys %$record) {
 print "$key: $record->{$key}\n";
}
print "\n";
}

Reading them in is easy, too.

$/ = ""; # paragraph read mode while (<>) {
 my @fields = split /^([^:]+):\s*/m; shift @fields; # for leading null field push(@Array_of_Records, {
 map /(.*)/, @fields });
}

The split acts upon $_ , its default second argument, which contains a full paragraph. The pattern looks for start of line (not just start of record, thanks to the /m) followed by one or more non-colons, followed by a colon and optional white space. When split's pattern contains parentheses, these are returned along with the values. The return values placed in @fields are in key-value order, with a leading null field we shift off. The braces in the call to push produces a reference to a new anonymous hash, which we copy @fields into. Since that array was stored in order of the needed key-value pairing, this makes for well-ordered hash contents.

All you're doing is reading and writing a plain text file, so you can use related recipes for additional components. You could use to ensure that you have clean, concurrent access; to store colons and newlines in keys and values; and store more complex structures.

If you are willing to sacrifice the elegance of a plain textfile for a quick, random-access database of records, use a DBM file, as described in .

See Also

The split function in perlfunc (1) and of Perl Developing; ; ;