Perl in Org Mode
Org Mode support for Perl
Introduction
This document is a short introduction to using Perl within Org mode.
Requirements and Setup
The only requirement is installed in the computer where Org Babel is executing the scripts.
(org-babel-do-load-languages 'org-babel-load-languages '((lisp . t)))
Org Mode Features for Perl Code Blocks
Header Arguments
The support of Perl in Babel is basic. There are no language-specific arguments for Perl code blocks.
Result Types
The only supported type is value
Support for sessions
There is no support for sessions.
var
It is possible ot pass several variables to Perl, including table variables. See below.
Examples of Use
These are two simple examples:
#+BEGIN_SRC perl :results value "hello world"; #+END_SRC #+RESULTS: : hello world
10 * 20 + 5;
#+end_example
Other types of output
Perl scripts might generate data that is parsed by Org. Unfortunately
its current support is not very powerful. Currently there is only one
method to receive data: :results value
. This is the default. The
result of the code block (the value of the last expression evaluated)
if returned to Org. If the result is an array (up to two dimensions)
it is interpreted as a table. Some examples below:
#+BEGIN_SRC perl :results value [[1,2],[2,4]] #+END_SRC #+RESULTS: | 1 | 2 | | 2 | 4 |
10 + 20
When returning an array, it is important to return a reference to the array. Otherwise it is interpreted as an scalar.
For example, this returns the size of the array:
#+BEGIN_SRC perl :results value my @result ; $i = 0; for $j ('a'..'e') { $result[$i] = $j; $i ++; } @result; #+END_SRC #+RESULTS: : 5
But this returns the values of the array and creates the corresponding table
#+BEGIN_SRC perl :results value my @result ; $i = 0; for $j ('a'..'e') { $result[$i] = $j; $i ++; } \@result; #+END_SRC #+RESULTS: | a | | b | | c | | d | | e |
#+BEGIN_SRC perl :results value my @result ; for $i (0..3) { for $j (0..2) { $result[$i][$j] = $j*$i+$j; } } \@result; #+END_SRC #+RESULTS: | 0 | 1 | 2 | | 0 | 2 | 4 | | 0 | 3 | 6 | | 0 | 4 | 8 |
Using tables as input
The most useful feature of using Perl within Org is the ability to use tables as input to scripts.
Let us assume we have the following table:
#+NAME:exampletable | 1 | a | | 2 | b | | 3 | c | | 4 | d |
We want to use this table as input. Org passes a table to Perl as
a reference to an array of anonymous one-dimension arrays. In
a nutshell, you can access an element of a table using
$$nameTable[row][column]
. Remember, in Perl indexes are zero based:
For instance, this block simply returns the input table. Please note
that because data is already a reference we can simply return it.
#+name: example1usingTable #+begin_src perl :var data=exampletable :results table :type value $data #+end_src #+RESULTS: example1usingTable | 1 | a | | 2 | b | | 3 | c | | 4 | d |
One challenge, however, is to know how big the table is. Perl does not have
native two dimensional arrays. Instead, it uses arrays of arrays (each sub-array
can have any size). In the block below we use a function (org_table_size
) to
return the number of columns and rows in a table.
#+name: example2usingTable #+begin_src perl :results value :var data=exampletable # first we need to define two functions that will make our life easier sub org_table_size { # return the number of columns and rows in a table my ($table) = @_; my $y = $$table[0]; return (scalar(@$y), scalar (@$table)); } my @result ; my ($cols, $rows) = org_table_size($data); ## transpose the input table for my $i ($0..$cols-1) { for my $j (0 .. $rows-1) { $result[$i][$j] = $$data[$j][$i]; } } \@result; #+end_src #+RESULTS: example2usingTable | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | | a | b | c | d |
Links to Tutorials and Other Resources
The best resource for Perl is The Perl programming documentation project.