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List::AllUtils(3)     User Contributed Perl Documentation    List::AllUtils(3)

NAME
       List::AllUtils -	Combines List::Util, List::SomeUtils and List::UtilsBy
       in one bite-sized package

VERSION
       version 0.18

SYNOPSIS
	   use List::AllUtils qw( first	any );

	   # _Everything_ from List::Util, List::SomeUtils, and	List::UtilsBy
	   use List::AllUtils qw( :all );

	   my @numbers = ( 1, 2, 3, 5, 7 );
	   # or	don't import anything
	   return List::AllUtils::first	{ $_ > 5 } @numbers;

DESCRIPTION
       Are you sick of trying to remember whether a particular helper is
       defined in List::Util, List::SomeUtils or List::UtilsBy?	I sure am. Now
       you don't have to remember. This	module will export all of the
       functions that either of	those three modules defines.

       Note that all function documentation has	been shamelessly copied	from
       List::Util, List::SomeUtils and List::UtilsBy.

   Which One Wins?
       Recently, List::Util has	started	including some of the subs that	used
       to only be in List::SomeUtils. Similarly, List::SomeUtils has some
       small overlap with List::UtilsBy. "List::AllUtils" always favors	the
       subroutine provided by List::Util, List::SomeUtils or List::UtilsBy in
       that order.

       The docs	below come from	List::Util 1.54, List::SomeUtils 0.58, and
       List::UtilsBy 0.11.

WHAT IS	EXPORTED?
       All this	module does is load List::Util,	List::SomeUtils, and
       List::UtilsBy, and then re-export everything that they provide. That
       means that regardless of	the documentation below, you will get any
       subroutine that your installed version provides.

LIST-REDUCTION FUNCTIONS
       The following set of functions all apply	a given	block of code to a
       list of values.

   reduce
	   $result = reduce { BLOCK } @list

       Reduces @list by	calling	"BLOCK"	in a scalar context multiple times,
       setting $a and $b each time. The	first call will	be with	$a and $b set
       to the first two	elements of the	list, subsequent calls will be done by
       setting $a to the result	of the previous	call and $b to the next
       element in the list.

       Returns the result of the last call to the "BLOCK". If @list is empty
       then "undef" is returned. If @list only contains	one element then that
       element is returned and "BLOCK" is not executed.

       The following examples all demonstrate how "reduce" could be used to
       implement the other list-reduction functions in this module. (They are
       not in fact implemented like this, but instead in a more	efficient
       manner in individual C functions).

	   $foo	= reduce { defined($a)		  ? $a :
			   $code->(local $_ = $b) ? $b :
						    undef } undef, @list # first

	   $foo	= reduce { $a >	$b ? $a	: $b } 1..10	   # max
	   $foo	= reduce { $a gt $b ? $a : $b }	'A'..'Z'   # maxstr
	   $foo	= reduce { $a <	$b ? $a	: $b } 1..10	   # min
	   $foo	= reduce { $a lt $b ? $a : $b }	'aa'..'zz' # minstr
	   $foo	= reduce { $a +	$b } 1 .. 10		   # sum
	   $foo	= reduce { $a .	$b } @bar		   # concat

	   $foo	= reduce { $a || $code->(local $_ = $b)	} 0, @bar   # any
	   $foo	= reduce { $a && $code->(local $_ = $b)	} 1, @bar   # all
	   $foo	= reduce { $a && !$code->(local	$_ = $b) } 1, @bar  # none
	   $foo	= reduce { $a || !$code->(local	$_ = $b) } 0, @bar  # notall
	      #	Note that these	implementations	do not fully short-circuit

       If your algorithm requires that "reduce"	produce	an identity value,
       then make sure that you always pass that	identity value as the first
       argument	to prevent "undef" being returned

	 $foo =	reduce { $a + $b } 0, @values;		   # sum with 0	identity value

       The above example code blocks also suggest how to use "reduce" to build
       a more efficient	combined version of one	of these basic functions and a
       "map" block. For	example, to find the total length of all the strings
       in a list, we could use

	   $total = sum	map { length } @strings;

       However,	this produces a	list of	temporary integer values as long as
       the original list of strings, only to reduce it down to a single	value
       again. We can compute the same result more efficiently by using
       "reduce"	with a code block that accumulates lengths by writing this
       instead as:

	   $total = reduce { $a	+ length $b } 0, @strings

       The other scalar-returning list reduction functions are all
       specialisations of this generic idea.

   reductions
	   @results = reductions { BLOCK } @list

       Since version 1.54.

       Similar to "reduce" except that it also returns the intermediate	values
       along with the final result. As before, $a is set to the	first element
       of the given list, and the "BLOCK" is then called once for remaining
       item in the list	set into $b, with the result being captured for	return
       as well as becoming the new value for $a.

       The returned list will begin with the initial value for $a, followed by
       each return value from the block	in order. The final value of the
       result will be identical	to what	the "reduce" function would have
       returned	given the same block and list.

	   reduce     {	"$a-$b"	}  "a".."d"    # "a-b-c-d"
	   reductions {	"$a-$b"	}  "a".."d"    # "a", "a-b", "a-b-c", "a-b-c-d"

   any
	   my $bool = any { BLOCK } @list;

       Since version 1.33.

       Similar to "grep" in that it evaluates "BLOCK" setting $_ to each
       element of @list	in turn. "any" returns true if any element makes the
       "BLOCK" return a	true value. If "BLOCK" never returns true or @list was
       empty then it returns false.

       Many cases of using "grep" in a conditional can be written using	"any"
       instead,	as it can short-circuit	after the first	true result.

	   if( any { length > 10 } @strings ) {
	       # at least one string has more than 10 characters
	   }

       Note: Due to XS issues the block	passed may be able to access the outer
       @_ directly. This is not	intentional and	will break under debugger.

   all
	   my $bool = all { BLOCK } @list;

       Since version 1.33.

       Similar to "any", except	that it	requires all elements of the @list to
       make the	"BLOCK"	return true. If	any element returns false, then	it
       returns false. If the "BLOCK" never returns false or the	@list was
       empty then it returns true.

       Note: Due to XS issues the block	passed may be able to access the outer
       @_ directly. This is not	intentional and	will break under debugger.

   none
   notall
	   my $bool = none { BLOCK } @list;

	   my $bool = notall { BLOCK } @list;

       Since version 1.33.

       Similar to "any"	and "all", but with the	return sense inverted. "none"
       returns true only if no value in	the @list causes the "BLOCK" to	return
       true, and "notall" returns true only if not all of the values do.

       Note: Due to XS issues the block	passed may be able to access the outer
       @_ directly. This is not	intentional and	will break under debugger.

   first
	   my $val = first { BLOCK } @list;

       Similar to "grep" in that it evaluates "BLOCK" setting $_ to each
       element of @list	in turn. "first" returns the first element where the
       result from "BLOCK" is a	true value. If "BLOCK" never returns true or
       @list was empty then "undef" is returned.

	   $foo	= first	{ defined($_) }	@list	 # first defined value in @list
	   $foo	= first	{ $_ > $value }	@list	 # first value in @list	which
						 # is greater than $value

   max
	   my $num = max @list;

       Returns the entry in the	list with the highest numerical	value. If the
       list is empty then "undef" is returned.

	   $foo	= max 1..10		   # 10
	   $foo	= max 3,9,12		   # 12
	   $foo	= max @bar, @baz	   # whatever

   maxstr
	   my $str = maxstr @list;

       Similar to "max", but treats all	the entries in the list	as strings and
       returns the highest string as defined by	the "gt" operator. If the list
       is empty	then "undef" is	returned.

	   $foo	= maxstr 'A'..'Z'	   # 'Z'
	   $foo	= maxstr "hello","world"   # "world"
	   $foo	= maxstr @bar, @baz	   # whatever

   min
	   my $num = min @list;

       Similar to "max"	but returns the	entry in the list with the lowest
       numerical value.	If the list is empty then "undef" is returned.

	   $foo	= min 1..10		   # 1
	   $foo	= min 3,9,12		   # 3
	   $foo	= min @bar, @baz	   # whatever

   minstr
	   my $str = minstr @list;

       Similar to "min", but treats all	the entries in the list	as strings and
       returns the lowest string as defined by the "lt"	operator. If the list
       is empty	then "undef" is	returned.

	   $foo	= minstr 'A'..'Z'	   # 'A'
	   $foo	= minstr "hello","world"   # "hello"
	   $foo	= minstr @bar, @baz	   # whatever

   product
	   my $num = product @list;

       Since version 1.35.

       Returns the numerical product of	all the	elements in @list. If @list is
       empty then 1 is returned.

	   $foo	= product 1..10		   # 3628800
	   $foo	= product 3,9,12	   # 324

   sum
	   my $num_or_undef = sum @list;

       Returns the numerical sum of all	the elements in	@list. For backwards
       compatibility, if @list is empty	then "undef" is	returned.

	   $foo	= sum 1..10		   # 55
	   $foo	= sum 3,9,12		   # 24
	   $foo	= sum @bar, @baz	   # whatever

   sum0
	   my $num = sum0 @list;

       Since version 1.26.

       Similar to "sum", except	this returns 0 when given an empty list,
       rather than "undef".  =head1 KEY/VALUE PAIR LIST	FUNCTIONS

       The following set of functions, all inspired by List::Pairwise, consume
       an even-sized list of pairs. The	pairs may be key/value associations
       from a hash, or just a list of values. The functions will all preserve
       the original ordering of	the pairs, and will not	be confused by
       multiple	pairs having the same "key" value - nor	even do	they require
       that the	first of each pair be a	plain string.

       NOTE: At	the time of writing, the following "pair*" functions that take
       a block do not modify the value of $_ within the	block, and instead
       operate using the $a and	$b globals instead. This has turned out	to be
       a poor design, as it precludes the ability to provide a "pairsort"
       function. Better	would be to pass pair-like objects as 2-element	array
       references in $_, in a style similar to the return value	of the "pairs"
       function. At some future	version	this behaviour may be added.

       Until then, users are alerted NOT to rely on the	value of $_ remaining
       unmodified between the outside and the inside of	the control block. In
       particular, the following example is UNSAFE:

	my @kvlist = ...

	foreach	(qw( some keys here )) {
	   my @items = pairgrep	{ $a eq	$_ } @kvlist;
	   ...
	}

       Instead,	write this using a lexical variable:

	foreach	my $key	(qw( some keys here )) {
	   my @items = pairgrep	{ $a eq	$key } @kvlist;
	   ...
	}

   pairs
	   my @pairs = pairs @kvlist;

       Since version 1.29.

       A convenient shortcut to	operating on even-sized	lists of pairs,	this
       function	returns	a list of "ARRAY" references, each containing two
       items from the given list. It is	a more efficient version of

	   @pairs = pairmap { [	$a, $b ] } @kvlist

       It is most convenient to	use in a "foreach" loop, for example:

	   foreach my $pair ( pairs @kvlist ) {
	      my ( $key, $value	) = @$pair;
	      ...
	   }

       Since version 1.39 these	"ARRAY"	references are blessed objects,
       recognising the two methods "key" and "value". The following code is
       equivalent:

	   foreach my $pair ( pairs @kvlist ) {
	      my $key	= $pair->key;
	      my $value	= $pair->value;
	      ...
	   }

       Since version 1.51 they also have a "TO_JSON" method to ease
       serialisation.

   unpairs
	   my @kvlist =	unpairs	@pairs

       Since version 1.42.

       The inverse function to "pairs";	this function takes a list of "ARRAY"
       references containing two elements each,	and returns a flattened	list
       of the two values from each of the pairs, in order. This	is notionally
       equivalent to

	   my @kvlist =	map { @{$_}[0,1] } @pairs

       except that it is implemented more efficiently internally.
       Specifically, for any input item	it will	extract	exactly	two values for
       the output list;	using "undef" if the input array references are	short.

       Between "pairs" and "unpairs", a	higher-order list function can be used
       to operate on the pairs as single scalars; such as the following	near-
       equivalents of the other	"pair*"	higher-order functions:

	   @kvlist = unpairs grep { FUNC } pairs @kvlist
	   # Like pairgrep, but	takes $_ instead of $a and $b

	   @kvlist = unpairs map { FUNC	} pairs	@kvlist
	   # Like pairmap, but takes $_	instead	of $a and $b

       Note however that these versions	will not behave	as nicely in scalar
       context.

       Finally,	this technique can be used to implement	a sort on a keyvalue
       pair list; e.g.:

	   @kvlist = unpairs sort { $a->key cmp	$b->key	} pairs	@kvlist

   pairkeys
	   my @keys = pairkeys @kvlist;

       Since version 1.29.

       A convenient shortcut to	operating on even-sized	lists of pairs,	this
       function	returns	a list of the the first	values of each of the pairs in
       the given list.	It is a	more efficient version of

	   @keys = pairmap { $a	} @kvlist

   pairvalues
	   my @values =	pairvalues @kvlist;

       Since version 1.29.

       A convenient shortcut to	operating on even-sized	lists of pairs,	this
       function	returns	a list of the the second values	of each	of the pairs
       in the given list.  It is a more	efficient version of

	   @values = pairmap { $b } @kvlist

   pairgrep
	   my @kvlist =	pairgrep { BLOCK } @kvlist;

	   my $count = pairgrep	{ BLOCK	} @kvlist;

       Since version 1.29.

       Similar to perl's "grep"	keyword, but interprets	the given list as an
       even-sized list of pairs. It invokes the	"BLOCK"	multiple times,	in
       scalar context, with $a and $b set to successive	pairs of values	from
       the @kvlist.

       Returns an even-sized list of those pairs for which the "BLOCK"
       returned	true in	list context, or the count of the number of pairs in
       scalar context.	(Note, therefore, in scalar context that it returns a
       number half the size of the count of items it would have	returned in
       list context).

	   @subset = pairgrep {	$a =~ m/^[[:upper:]]+$/	} @kvlist

       As with "grep" aliasing $_ to list elements, "pairgrep" aliases $a and
       $b to elements of the given list. Any modifications of it by the	code
       block will be visible to	the caller.

   pairfirst
	   my (	$key, $val ) = pairfirst { BLOCK } @kvlist;

	   my $found = pairfirst { BLOCK } @kvlist;

       Since version 1.30.

       Similar to the "first" function,	but interprets the given list as an
       even-sized list of pairs. It invokes the	"BLOCK"	multiple times,	in
       scalar context, with $a and $b set to successive	pairs of values	from
       the @kvlist.

       Returns the first pair of values	from the list for which	the "BLOCK"
       returned	true in	list context, or an empty list of no such pair was
       found. In scalar	context	it returns a simple boolean value, rather than
       either the key or the value found.

	   ( $key, $value ) = pairfirst	{ $a =~	m/^[[:upper:]]+$/ } @kvlist

       As with "grep" aliasing $_ to list elements, "pairfirst"	aliases	$a and
       $b to elements of the given list. Any modifications of it by the	code
       block will be visible to	the caller.

   pairmap
	   my @list = pairmap {	BLOCK }	@kvlist;

	   my $count = pairmap { BLOCK } @kvlist;

       Since version 1.29.

       Similar to perl's "map" keyword,	but interprets the given list as an
       even-sized list of pairs. It invokes the	"BLOCK"	multiple times,	in
       list context, with $a and $b set	to successive pairs of values from the
       @kvlist.

       Returns the concatenation of all	the values returned by the "BLOCK" in
       list context, or	the count of the number	of items that would have been
       returned	in scalar context.

	   @result = pairmap { "The key	$a has value $b" } @kvlist

       As with "map" aliasing $_ to list elements, "pairmap" aliases $a	and $b
       to elements of the given	list. Any modifications	of it by the code
       block will be visible to	the caller.

       See "KNOWN BUGS"	for a known-bug	with "pairmap",	and a workaround.

OTHER FUNCTIONS
   shuffle
	   my @values =	shuffle	@values;

       Returns the values of the input in a random order

	   @cards = shuffle 0..51      # 0..51 in a random order

       This function is	affected by the	$RAND variable.

   sample
	   my @items = sample $count, @values

       Since version 1.54.

       Randomly	select the given number	of elements from the input list. Any
       given position in the input list	will be	selected at most once.

       If there	are fewer than $count items in the list	then the function will
       return once all of them have been randomly selected; effectively	the
       function	behaves	similarly to "shuffle".

       This function is	affected by the	$RAND variable.

   uniq
	   my @subset =	uniq @values

       Since version 1.45.

       Filters a list of values	to remove subsequent duplicates, as judged by
       a DWIM-ish string equality or "undef" test. Preserves the order of
       unique elements,	and retains the	first value of any duplicate set.

	   my $count = uniq @values

       In scalar context, returns the number of	elements that would have been
       returned	as a list.

       The "undef" value is treated by this function as	distinct from the
       empty string, and no warning will be produced. It is left as-is in the
       returned	list. Subsequent "undef" values	are still considered identical
       to the first, and will be removed.

   uniqnum
	   my @subset =	uniqnum	@values

       Since version 1.44.

       Filters a list of values	to remove subsequent duplicates, as judged by
       a numerical equality test. Preserves the	order of unique	elements, and
       retains the first value of any duplicate	set.

	   my $count = uniqnum @values

       In scalar context, returns the number of	elements that would have been
       returned	as a list.

       Note that "undef" is treated much as other numerical operations treat
       it; it compares equal to	zero but additionally produces a warning if
       such warnings are enabled ("use warnings	'uninitialized';"). In
       addition, an "undef" in the returned list is coerced into a numerical
       zero, so	that the entire	list of	values returned	by "uniqnum" are well-
       behaved as numbers.

       Note also that multiple IEEE "NaN" values are treated as	duplicates of
       each other, regardless of any differences in their payloads, and
       despite the fact	that "0+'NaN' == 0+'NaN'" yields false.

   uniqstr
	   my @subset =	uniqstr	@values

       Since version 1.45.

       Filters a list of values	to remove subsequent duplicates, as judged by
       a string	equality test. Preserves the order of unique elements, and
       retains the first value of any duplicate	set.

	   my $count = uniqstr @values

       In scalar context, returns the number of	elements that would have been
       returned	as a list.

       Note that "undef" is treated much as other string operations treat it;
       it compares equal to the	empty string but additionally produces a
       warning if such warnings	are enabled ("use warnings 'uninitialized';").
       In addition, an "undef" in the returned list is coerced into an empty
       string, so that the entire list of values returned by "uniqstr" are
       well-behaved as strings.

   head
	   my @values =	head $size, @list;

       Since version 1.50.

       Returns the first $size elements	from @list. If $size is	negative,
       returns all but the last	$size elements from @list.

	   @result = head 2, qw( foo bar baz );
	   # foo, bar

	   @result = head -2, qw( foo bar baz );
	   # foo

   tail
	   my @values =	tail $size, @list;

       Since version 1.50.

       Returns the last	$size elements from @list. If $size is negative,
       returns all but the first $size elements	from @list.

	   @result = tail 2, qw( foo bar baz );
	   # bar, baz

	   @result = tail -2, qw( foo bar baz );
	   # baz

List::SomeUtils	FUNCTIONS
   Junctions
       Treatment of an empty list

       There are two schools of	thought	for how	to evaluate a junction on an
       empty list:

       o   Reduction to	an identity (boolean)

       o   Result is undefined (three-valued)

       In the first case, the result of	the junction applied to	the empty list
       is determined by	a mathematical reduction to an identity	depending on
       whether the underlying comparison is "or" or "and".  Conceptually:

			   "any	are true"      "all are	true"
			   --------------      --------------
	   2 elements:	   A ||	B || 0	       A && B && 1
	   1 element:	   A ||	0	       A && 1
	   0 elements:	   0		       1

       In the second case, three-value logic is	desired, in which a junction
       applied to an empty list	returns	"undef"	rather than true or false

       Junctions with a	"_u" suffix implement three-valued logic.  Those
       without are boolean.

       all BLOCK LIST

       all_u BLOCK LIST

       Returns a true value if all items in LIST meet the criterion given
       through BLOCK. Sets $_ for each item in LIST in turn:

	 print "All values are non-negative"
	   if all { $_ >= 0 } ($x, $y, $z);

       For an empty LIST, "all"	returns	true (i.e. no values failed the
       condition) and "all_u" returns "undef".

       Thus, "all_u(@list)" is equivalent to "@list ? all(@list) : undef".

       Note: because Perl treats "undef" as false, you must check the return
       value of	"all_u"	with "defined" or you will get the opposite result of
       what you	expect.

       any BLOCK LIST

       any_u BLOCK LIST

       Returns a true value if any item	in LIST	meets the criterion given
       through BLOCK. Sets $_ for each item in LIST in turn:

	 print "At least one non-negative value"
	   if any { $_ >= 0 } ($x, $y, $z);

       For an empty LIST, "any"	returns	false and "any_u" returns "undef".

       Thus, "any_u(@list)" is equivalent to "@list ? any(@list) : undef".

       none BLOCK LIST

       none_u BLOCK LIST

       Logically the negation of "any".	Returns	a true value if	no item	in
       LIST meets the criterion	given through BLOCK. Sets $_ for each item in
       LIST in turn:

	 print "No non-negative	values"
	   if none { $_	>= 0 } ($x, $y,	$z);

       For an empty LIST, "none" returns true (i.e. no values failed the
       condition) and "none_u" returns "undef".

       Thus, "none_u(@list)" is	equivalent to "@list ? none(@list) : undef".

       Note: because Perl treats "undef" as false, you must check the return
       value of	"none_u" with "defined"	or you will get	the opposite result of
       what you	expect.

       notall BLOCK LIST

       notall_u	BLOCK LIST

       Logically the negation of "all".	Returns	a true value if	not all	items
       in LIST meet the	criterion given	through	BLOCK. Sets $_ for each	item
       in LIST in turn:

	 print "Not all	values are non-negative"
	   if notall { $_ >= 0 } ($x, $y, $z);

       For an empty LIST, "notall" returns false and "notall_u"	returns
       "undef".

       Thus, "notall_u(@list)" is equivalent to	"@list ? notall(@list) :
       undef".

       one BLOCK LIST

       one_u BLOCK LIST

       Returns a true value if precisely one item in LIST meets	the criterion
       given through BLOCK. Sets $_ for	each item in LIST in turn:

	   print "Precisely one	value defined"
	       if one {	defined($_) } @list;

       Returns false otherwise.

       For an empty LIST, "one"	returns	false and "one_u" returns "undef".

       The expression "one BLOCK LIST" is almost equivalent to "1 == true
       BLOCK LIST", except for short-cutting.  Evaluation of BLOCK will
       immediately stop	at the second true value.

   Transformation
       apply BLOCK LIST

       Makes a copy of the list	and then passes	each element from the copy to
       the BLOCK. Any changes or assignments to	$_ in the BLOCK	will only
       affect the elements of the new list. However, if	$_ is a	reference then
       changes to the referenced value will be seen in both the	original and
       new list.

       This function is	similar	to "map" but will not modify the elements of
       the input list:

	 my @list = (1 .. 4);
	 my @mult = apply { $_ *= 2 } @list;
	 print "\@list = @list\n";
	 print "\@mult = @mult\n";
	 __END__
	 @list = 1 2 3 4
	 @mult = 2 4 6 8

       Think of	it as syntactic	sugar for

	 for (my @mult = @list)	{ $_ *=	2 }

       Note that you must alter	$_ directly inside BLOCK in order for changes
       to make effect. New value returned from the BLOCK are ignored:

	 # @new	is identical to	@list.
	 my @new = apply { $_ *	2 } @list;

	 # @new	is different from @list
	 my @new = apply { $_ =* 2 } @list;

       insert_after BLOCK VALUE	LIST

       Inserts VALUE after the first item in LIST for which the	criterion in
       BLOCK is	true. Sets $_ for each item in LIST in turn.

	 my @list = qw/This is a list/;
	 insert_after {	$_ eq "a" } "longer" =>	@list;
	 print "@list";
	 __END__
	 This is a longer list

       insert_after_string STRING VALUE	LIST

       Inserts VALUE after the first item in LIST which	is equal to STRING.

	 my @list = qw/This is a list/;
	 insert_after_string "a", "longer" => @list;
	 print "@list";
	 __END__
	 This is a longer list

       pairwise	BLOCK ARRAY1 ARRAY2

       Evaluates BLOCK for each	pair of	elements in ARRAY1 and ARRAY2 and
       returns a new list consisting of	BLOCK's	return values. The two
       elements	are set	to $a and $b.  Note that those two are aliases to the
       original	value so changing them will modify the input arrays.

	 @a = (1 .. 5);
	 @b = (11 .. 15);
	 @x = pairwise { $a + $b } @a, @b;     # returns 12, 14, 16, 18, 20

	 # mesh	with pairwise
	 @a = qw/a b c/;
	 @b = qw/1 2 3/;
	 @x = pairwise { ($a, $b) } @a,	@b;    # returns a, 1, b, 2, c,	3

       mesh ARRAY1 ARRAY2 [ ARRAY3 ... ]

       zip ARRAY1 ARRAY2 [ ARRAY3 ... ]

       Returns a list consisting of the	first elements of each array, then the
       second, then the	third, etc, until all arrays are exhausted.

       Examples:

	 @x = qw/a b c d/;
	 @y = qw/1 2 3 4/;
	 @z = mesh @x, @y;	   # returns a,	1, b, 2, c, 3, d, 4

	 @a = ('x');
	 @b = ('1', '2');
	 @c = qw/zip zap zot/;
	 @d = mesh @a, @b, @c;	 # x, 1, zip, undef, 2,	zap, undef, undef, zot

       "zip" is	an alias for "mesh".

       uniq LIST

       distinct	LIST

       Returns a new list by stripping duplicate values	in LIST	by comparing
       the values as hash keys,	except that undef is considered	separate from
       ''.  The	order of elements in the returned list is the same as in LIST.
       In scalar context, returns the number of	unique elements	in LIST.

	 my @x = uniq 1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 5,	3, 4; #	returns	1 2 3 5	4
	 my $x = uniq 1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 5,	3, 4; #	returns	5
	 # returns "Mike", "Michael", "Richard", "Rick"
	 my @n = distinct "Mike", "Michael", "Richard",	"Rick",	"Michael", "Rick"
	 # returns '', undef, 'S1', A5'
	 my @s = distinct '', undef, 'S1', 'A5'
	 # returns '', undef, 'S1', A5'
	 my @w = uniq undef, '', 'S1', 'A5'

       "distinct" is an	alias for "uniq".

       RT#49800	can be used to give feedback about this	behavior.

       singleton

       Returns a new list by stripping values in LIST occurring	more than once
       by comparing the	values as hash keys, except that undef is considered
       separate	from ''.  The order of elements	in the returned	list is	the
       same as in LIST.	 In scalar context, returns the	number of elements
       occurring only once in LIST.

	 my @x = singleton 1,1,2,2,3,4,5 # returns 3 4 5

   Partitioning
       after BLOCK LIST

       Returns a list of the values of LIST after (and not including) the
       point where BLOCK returns a true	value. Sets $_ for each	element	in
       LIST in turn.

	 @x = after { $_ % 5 ==	0 } (1..9);    # returns 6, 7, 8, 9

       after_incl BLOCK	LIST

       Same as "after" but also	includes the element for which BLOCK is	true.

       before BLOCK LIST

       Returns a list of values	of LIST	up to (and not including) the point
       where BLOCK returns a true value. Sets $_ for each element in LIST in
       turn.

       before_incl BLOCK LIST

       Same as "before"	but also includes the element for which	BLOCK is true.

       part BLOCK LIST

       Partitions LIST based on	the return value of BLOCK which	denotes	into
       which partition the current value is put.

       Returns a list of the partitions	thusly created.	Each partition created
       is a reference to an array.

	 my $i = 0;
	 my @part = part { $i++	% 2 } 1	.. 8;	# returns [1, 3, 5, 7],	[2, 4, 6, 8]

       You can have a sparse list of partitions	as well	where non-set
       partitions will be undef:

	 my @part = part { 2 } 1 .. 10;		   # returns undef, undef, [ 1 .. 10 ]

       Be careful with negative	values,	though:

	 my @part = part { -1 }	1 .. 10;
	 __END__
	 Modification of non-creatable array value attempted, subscript	-1 ...

       Negative	values are only	ok when	they refer to a	partition previously
       created:

	 my @idx  = ( 0, 1, -1 );
	 my $i	  = 0;
	 my @part = part { $idx[$i++ % 3] } 1 .. 8; # [1, 4, 7], [2, 3,	5, 6, 8]

   Iteration
       each_array ARRAY1 ARRAY2	...

       Creates an array	iterator to return the elements	of the list of arrays
       ARRAY1, ARRAY2 throughout ARRAYn	in turn.  That is, the first time it
       is called, it returns the first element of each array.  The next	time,
       it returns the second elements.	And so on, until all elements are
       exhausted.

       This is useful for looping over more than one array at once:

	 my $ea	= each_array(@a, @b, @c);
	 while ( my ($a, $b, $c) = $ea->() )   { .... }

       The iterator returns the	empty list when	it reached the end of all
       arrays.

       If the iterator is passed an argument of	'"index"', then	it returns the
       index of	the last fetched set of	values,	as a scalar.

       each_arrayref LIST

       Like each_array,	but the	arguments are references to arrays, not	the
       plain arrays.

       natatime	EXPR, LIST

       Creates an array	iterator, for looping over an array in chunks of $n
       items at	a time.	 (n at a time, get it?).  An example is	probably a
       better explanation than I could give in words.

       Example:

	 my @x = ('a' .. 'g');
	 my $it	= natatime 3, @x;
	 while (my @vals = $it->())
	 {
	   print "@vals\n";
	 }

       This prints

	 a b c
	 d e f
	 g

   Searching
       bsearch BLOCK LIST

       Performs	a binary search	on LIST	which must be a	sorted list of values.
       BLOCK must return a negative value if the current element (stored in
       $_) is smaller, a positive value	if it is bigger	and zero if it
       matches.

       Returns a boolean value in scalar context. In list context, it returns
       the element if it was found, otherwise the empty	list.

       bsearchidx BLOCK	LIST

       bsearch_index BLOCK LIST

       Performs	a binary search	on LIST	which must be a	sorted list of values.
       BLOCK must return a negative value if the current element (stored in
       $_) is smaller, a positive value	if it is bigger	and zero if it
       matches.

       Returns the index of found element, otherwise "-1".

       "bsearch_index" is an alias for "bsearchidx".

       firstval	BLOCK LIST

       first_value BLOCK LIST

       Returns the first element in LIST for which BLOCK evaluates to true.
       Each element of LIST is set to $_ in turn. Returns "undef" if no	such
       element has been	found.

       "first_value" is	an alias for "firstval".

       onlyval BLOCK LIST

       only_value BLOCK	LIST

       Returns the only	element	in LIST	for which BLOCK	evaluates to true.
       Sets $_ for each	item in	LIST in	turn. Returns "undef" if no such
       element has been	found.

       "only_value" is an alias	for "onlyval".

       lastval BLOCK LIST

       last_value BLOCK	LIST

       Returns the last	value in LIST for which	BLOCK evaluates	to true. Each
       element of LIST is set to $_ in turn. Returns "undef" if	no such
       element has been	found.

       "last_value" is an alias	for "lastval".

       firstres	BLOCK LIST

       first_result BLOCK LIST

       Returns the result of BLOCK for the first element in LIST for which
       BLOCK evaluates to true.	Each element of	LIST is	set to $_ in turn.
       Returns "undef" if no such element has been found.

       "first_result" is an alias for "firstres".

       onlyres BLOCK LIST

       only_result BLOCK LIST

       Returns the result of BLOCK for the first element in LIST for which
       BLOCK evaluates to true.	Sets $_	for each item in LIST in turn. Returns
       "undef" if no such element has been found.

       "only_result" is	an alias for "onlyres".

       lastres BLOCK LIST

       last_result BLOCK LIST

       Returns the result of BLOCK for the last	element	in LIST	for which
       BLOCK evaluates to true.	Each element of	LIST is	set to $_ in turn.
       Returns "undef" if no such element has been found.

       "last_result" is	an alias for "lastres".

       indexes BLOCK LIST

       Evaluates BLOCK for each	element	in LIST	(assigned to $_) and returns a
       list of the indices of those elements for which BLOCK returned a	true
       value. This is just like	"grep" only that it returns indices instead of
       values:

	 @x = indexes {	$_ % 2 == 0 } (1..10);	 # returns 1, 3, 5, 7, 9

       firstidx	BLOCK LIST

       first_index BLOCK LIST

       Returns the index of the	first element in LIST for which	the criterion
       in BLOCK	is true. Sets $_ for each item in LIST in turn:

	 my @list = (1,	4, 3, 2, 4, 6);
	 printf	"item with index %i in list is 4", firstidx { $_ == 4 }	@list;
	 __END__
	 item with index 1 in list is 4

       Returns "-1" if no such item could be found.

       "first_index" is	an alias for "firstidx".

       onlyidx BLOCK LIST

       only_index BLOCK	LIST

       Returns the index of the	only element in	LIST for which the criterion
       in BLOCK	is true. Sets $_ for each item in LIST in turn:

	   my @list = (1, 3, 4,	3, 2, 4);
	   printf "uniqe index of item 2 in list is %i", onlyidx { $_ == 2 } @list;
	   __END__
	   unique index	of item	2 in list is 4

       Returns "-1" if either no such item or more than	one of these has been
       found.

       "only_index" is an alias	for "onlyidx".

       lastidx BLOCK LIST

       last_index BLOCK	LIST

       Returns the index of the	last element in	LIST for which the criterion
       in BLOCK	is true. Sets $_ for each item in LIST in turn:

	 my @list = (1,	4, 3, 2, 4, 6);
	 printf	"item with index %i in list is 4", lastidx { $_	== 4 } @list;
	 __END__
	 item with index 4 in list is 4

       Returns "-1" if no such item could be found.

       "last_index" is an alias	for "lastidx".

   Sorting
       sort_by BLOCK LIST

       Returns the list	of values sorted according to the string values
       returned	by the KEYFUNC block or	function. A typical use	of this	may be
       to sort objects according to the	string value of	some accessor, such as

	 sort_by { $_->name } @people

       The key function	is called in scalar context, being passed each value
       in turn as both $_ and the only argument	in the parameters, @_. The
       values are then sorted according	to string comparisons on the values
       returned.  This is equivalent to

	 sort {	$a->name cmp $b->name }	@people

       except that it guarantees the name accessor will	be executed only once
       per value.  One interesting use-case is to sort strings which may have
       numbers embedded	in them	"naturally", rather than lexically.

	 sort_by { s/(\d+)/sprintf "%09d", $1/eg; $_ } @strings

       This sorts strings by generating	sort keys which	zero-pad the embedded
       numbers to some level (9	digits in this case), helping to ensure	the
       lexical sort puts them in the correct order.

       nsort_by	BLOCK LIST

       Similar to sort_by but compares its key values numerically.

   Counting and	calculation
       true BLOCK LIST

       Counts the number of elements in	LIST for which the criterion in	BLOCK
       is true.	 Sets $_ for  each item	in LIST	in turn:

	 printf	"%i item(s) are	defined", true { defined($_) } @list;

       false BLOCK LIST

       Counts the number of elements in	LIST for which the criterion in	BLOCK
       is false.  Sets $_ for each item	in LIST	in turn:

	 printf	"%i item(s) are	not defined", false { defined($_) } @list;

       minmax LIST

       Calculates the minimum and maximum of LIST and returns a	two element
       list with the first element being the minimum and the second the
       maximum.	Returns	the empty list if LIST was empty.

       The "minmax" algorithm differs from a naive iteration over the list
       where each element is compared to two values being the so far
       calculated min and max value in that it only requires 3n/2 - 2
       comparisons. Thus it is the most	efficient possible algorithm.

       However,	the Perl implementation	of it has some overhead	simply due to
       the fact	that there are more lines of Perl code involved. Therefore,
       LIST needs to be	fairly big in order for	"minmax" to win	over a naive
       implementation. This limitation does not	apply to the XS	version.

       mode LIST

       Calculates the most common items	in the list and	returns	them as	a
       list. This is effectively done by string	comparisons, so	references
       will be stringified. If they implement string overloading, this will be
       used.

       If more than one	item appears the same number of	times in the list, all
       such items will be returned. For	example, the mode of a unique list is
       the list	itself.

       This function returns a list in list context. In	scalar context it
       returns a count indicating the number of	modes in the list.

List::UtilsBy FUNCTIONS
       All functions added since version 0.04 unless otherwise stated, as the
       original	names for earlier versions were	renamed.

   sort_by
	  @vals	= sort_by { KEYFUNC } @vals

       Returns the list	of values sorted according to the string values
       returned	by the "KEYFUNC" block or function. A typical use of this may
       be to sort objects according to the string value	of some	accessor, such
       as

	  sort_by { $_->name } @people

       The key function	is called in scalar context, being passed each value
       in turn as both $_ and the only argument	in the parameters, @_. The
       values are then sorted according	to string comparisons on the values
       returned.

       This is equivalent to

	  sort { $a->name cmp $b->name } @people

       except that it guarantees the "name" accessor will be executed only
       once per	value.

       One interesting use-case	is to sort strings which may have numbers
       embedded	in them	"naturally", rather than lexically.

	  sort_by { s/(\d+)/sprintf "%09d", $1/eg; $_ }	@strings

       This sorts strings by generating	sort keys which	zero-pad the embedded
       numbers to some level (9	digits in this case), helping to ensure	the
       lexical sort puts them in the correct order.

   nsort_by
	  @vals	= nsort_by { KEYFUNC } @vals

       Similar to "sort_by" but	compares its key values	numerically.

   rev_sort_by
   rev_nsort_by
	  @vals	= rev_sort_by {	KEYFUNC	} @vals

	  @vals	= rev_nsort_by { KEYFUNC } @vals

       Since version 0.06.

       Similar to "sort_by" and	"nsort_by" but returns the list	in the reverse
       order. Equivalent to

	  @vals	= reverse sort_by { KEYFUNC } @vals

       except that these functions are slightly	more efficient because they
       avoid the final "reverse" operation.

   max_by
	  $optimal = max_by { KEYFUNC }	@vals

	  @optimal = max_by { KEYFUNC }	@vals

       Returns the (first) value from @vals that gives the numerically largest
       result from the key function.

	  my $tallest =	max_by { $_->height } @people

	  use File::stat qw( stat );
	  my $newest = max_by {	stat($_)->mtime	} @files;

       In scalar context, the first maximal value is returned. In list
       context,	a list of all the maximal values is returned. This may be used
       to obtain positions other than the first, if order is significant.

       If called on an empty list, an empty list is returned.

       For symmetry with the "nsort_by"	function, this is also provided	under
       the name	"nmax_by" since	it behaves numerically.

   min_by
	  $optimal = min_by { KEYFUNC }	@vals

	  @optimal = min_by { KEYFUNC }	@vals

       Similar to "max_by" but returns values which give the numerically
       smallest	result from the	key function. Also provided as "nmin_by"

   minmax_by
	  ( $minimal, $maximal ) = minmax_by { KEYFUNC } @vals

       Since version 0.11.

       Similar to calling both "min_by"	and "max_by" with the same key
       function	on the same list. This version is more efficient than calling
       the two other functions individually, as	it has less work to perform
       overall.	In the case of ties, only the first optimal element found in
       each case is returned. Also provided as "nminmax_by".

   uniq_by
	  @vals	= uniq_by { KEYFUNC } @vals

       Returns a list of the subset of values for which	the key	function block
       returns unique values. The first	value yielding a particular key	is
       chosen, subsequent values are rejected.

	  my @some_fruit = uniq_by { $_->colour	} @fruit;

       To select instead the last value	per key, reverse the input list. If
       the order of the	results	is significant,	don't forget to	reverse	the
       result as well:

	  my @some_fruit = reverse uniq_by { $_->colour	} reverse @fruit;

       Because the values returned by the key function are used	as hash	keys,
       they ought to either be strings,	or at least well-behaved as strings
       (such as	numbers, or object references which overload stringification
       in a suitable manner).

   partition_by
	  %parts = partition_by	{ KEYFUNC } @vals

       Returns a key/value list	of ARRAY refs containing all the original
       values distributed according to the result of the key function block.
       Each value will be an ARRAY ref containing all the values which
       returned	the string from	the key	function, in their original order.

	  my %balls_by_colour =	partition_by { $_->colour } @balls;

       Because the values returned by the key function are used	as hash	keys,
       they ought to either be strings,	or at least well-behaved as strings
       (such as	numbers, or object references which overload stringification
       in a suitable manner).

   count_by
	  %counts = count_by { KEYFUNC } @vals

       Since version 0.07.

       Returns a key/value list	of integers, giving the	number of times	the
       key function block returned the key, for	each value in the list.

	  my %count_of_balls = count_by	{ $_->colour } @balls;

       Because the values returned by the key function are used	as hash	keys,
       they ought to either be strings,	or at least well-behaved as strings
       (such as	numbers, or object references which overload stringification
       in a suitable manner).

   zip_by
	  @vals	= zip_by { ITEMFUNC } \@arr0, \@arr1, \@arr2,...

       Returns a list of each of the values returned by	the function block,
       when invoked with values	from across each each of the given ARRAY
       references. Each	value in the returned list will	be the result of the
       function	having been invoked with arguments at that position, from
       across each of the arrays given.

	  my @transposition = zip_by { [ @_ ] }	@matrix;

	  my @names = zip_by { "$_[1], $_[0]" }	\@firstnames, \@surnames;

	  print	zip_by { "$_[0]	=> $_[1]\n" } [	keys %hash ], [	values %hash ];

       If some of the arrays are shorter than others, the function will	behave
       as if they had "undef" in the trailing positions. The following two
       lines are equivalent:

	  zip_by { f(@_) } [ 1,	2, 3 ],	[ "a", "b" ]
	  f( 1,	"a" ), f( 2, "b" ), f( 3, undef	)

       The item	function is called by "map", so	if it returns a	list, the
       entire list is included in the result. This can be useful for example,
       for generating a	hash from two separate lists of	keys and values

	  my %nums = zip_by { @_ } [qw(	one two	three )], [ 1, 2, 3 ];
	  # %nums = ( one => 1,	two => 2, three	=> 3 )

       (A function having this behaviour is sometimes called "zipWith",	e.g.
       in Haskell, but that name would not fit the naming scheme used by this
       module).

   unzip_by
	  $arr0, $arr1,	$arr2, ... = unzip_by {	ITEMFUNC } @vals

       Since version 0.09.

       Returns a list of ARRAY references containing the values	returned by
       the function block, when	invoked	for each of the	values given in	the
       input list.  Each of the	returned ARRAY references will contain the
       values returned at that corresponding position by the function block.
       That is,	the first returned ARRAY reference will	contain	all the	values
       returned	in the first position by the function block, the second	will
       contain all the values from the second position,	and so on.

	  my ( $firstnames, $lastnames ) = unzip_by { m/^(.*?) (.*)$/ }	@names;

       If the function returns lists of	differing lengths, the result will be
       padded with "undef" in the missing elements.

       This function is	an inverse of "zip_by",	if given a corresponding
       inverse function.

   extract_by
	  @vals	= extract_by { SELECTFUNC } @arr

       Since version 0.05.

       Removes elements	from the referenced array on which the selection
       function	returns	true, and returns a list containing those elements.
       This function is	similar	to "grep", except that it modifies the
       referenced array	to remove the selected values from it, leaving only
       the unselected ones.

	  my @red_balls	= extract_by { $_->color eq "red" } @balls;

	  # Now	there are no red balls in the @balls array

       This function modifies a	real array, unlike most	of the other functions
       in this module. Because of this,	it requires a real array, not just a
       list.

       This function is	implemented by invoking	"splice" on the	array, not by
       constructing a new list and assigning it. One result of this is that
       weak references will not	be disturbed.

	  extract_by { !defined	$_ } @refs;

       will leave weak references weakened in the @refs	array, whereas

	  @refs	= grep { defined $_ } @refs;

       will strengthen them all	again.

   extract_first_by
	  $val = extract_first_by { SELECTFUNC } @arr

       Since version 0.10.

       A hybrid	between	"extract_by" and "List::Util::first". Removes the
       first element from the referenced array on which	the selection function
       returns true, returning it.

       As with "extract_by", this function requires a real array and not just
       a list, and is also implemented using "splice" so that weak references
       are not disturbed.

       If this function	fails to find a	matching element, it will return an
       empty list in list context. This	allows a caller	to distinguish the
       case between no matching	element, and the first matching	element	being
       "undef".

   weighted_shuffle_by
	  @vals	= weighted_shuffle_by {	WEIGHTFUNC } @vals

       Since version 0.07.

       Returns the list	of values shuffled into	a random order.	The
       randomisation is	not uniform, but weighted by the value returned	by the
       "WEIGHTFUNC". The probabilty of each item being returned	first will be
       distributed with	the distribution of the	weights, and so	on recursively
       for the remaining items.

   bundle_by
	  @vals	= bundle_by { BLOCKFUNC	} $number, @vals

       Since version 0.07.

       Similar to a regular "map" functional, returns a	list of	the values
       returned	by "BLOCKFUNC".	Values from the	input list are given to	the
       block function in bundles of $number.

       If given	a list of values whose length does not evenly divide by
       $number,	the final call will be passed fewer elements than the others.

EXPORTS
       This module exports nothing by default. You can import functions	by
       name, or	get everything with the	":all" tag.

SEE ALSO
       List::Util,  List::SomeUtils and	List::UtilsBy, obviously.

       Also see	"Util::Any", which unifies many	more util modules, and also
       lets you	rename functions as part of the	import.

BUGS
       Please report any bugs or feature requests to
       "bug-list-allutils@rt.cpan.org",	or through the web interface at
       <http://rt.cpan.org>.  I	will be	notified, and then you'll
       automatically be	notified of progress on	your bug as I make changes.

       Bugs may	be submitted at
       <https://github.com/houseabsolute/List-AllUtils/issues>.

       I am also usually active	on IRC as 'autarch' on "irc://irc.perl.org".

SOURCE
       The source code repository for List-AllUtils can	be found at
       <https://github.com/houseabsolute/List-AllUtils>.

DONATIONS
       If you'd	like to	thank me for the work I've done	on this	module,	please
       consider	making a "donation" to me via PayPal. I	spend a	lot of free
       time creating free software, and	would appreciate any support you'd
       care to offer.

       Please note that	I am not suggesting that you must do this in order for
       me to continue working on this particular software. I will continue to
       do so, inasmuch as I have in the	past, for as long as it	interests me.

       Similarly, a donation made in this way will probably not	make me	work
       on this software	much more, unless I get	so many	donations that I can
       consider	working	on free	software full time (let's all have a chuckle
       at that together).

       To donate, log into PayPal and send money to autarch@urth.org, or use
       the button at <https://www.urth.org/fs-donation.html>.

AUTHOR
       Dave Rolsky <autarch@urth.org>

CONTRIBUTORS
       o   Andy	Jack <github@veracity.ca>

       o   Dave	Jacoby <jacoby.david@gmail.com>

       o   Karen Etheridge <ether@cpan.org>

       o   Olaf	Alders <olaf@wundersolutions.com>

       o   Ricardo Signes <rjbs@cpan.org>

       o   Yanick Champoux <yanick@babyl.dyndns.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
       This software is	Copyright (c) 2020 by Dave Rolsky.

       This is free software, licensed under:

	 The Artistic License 2.0 (GPL Compatible)

       The full	text of	the license can	be found in the	LICENSE	file included
       with this distribution.

perl v5.32.1			  2020-09-05		     List::AllUtils(3)

NAME | VERSION | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | WHAT IS EXPORTED? | LIST-REDUCTION FUNCTIONS | OTHER FUNCTIONS | List::SomeUtils FUNCTIONS | List::UtilsBy FUNCTIONS | EXPORTS | SEE ALSO | BUGS | SOURCE | DONATIONS | AUTHOR | CONTRIBUTORS | COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

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