If I do it with references, it works like a charm.
use strict; use warnings;
use Data::Dumper;
use Hash::Merge qw(merge);
my $h1 = {
'57494' => {
'name' => 'John Smith',
'age' => '9',
'height' => '120'
},
'57495' => {
'name' => 'Amy Pond',
'age' => '17',
'height' => '168'
}
};
my $h2 = {
'57494' => {
'name_address' => 'Peter Smith',
'address' => '5 Cambridge Road',
'post_code' => 'CR5 0FS'
}
};
my $h3 = merge( $h1, $h2 );
print Dumper $h3;
Output:
$VAR1 = {
'57495' => {
'name' => 'Amy Pond',
'age' => '17',
'height' => '168'
},
'57494' => {
'name_address' => 'Peter Smith',
'name' => 'John Smith',
'post_code' => 'CR5 0FS',
'address' => '5 Cambridge Road',
'height' => '120',
'age' => '9'
}
};
If, however, I do it with hashes instead of hash refs, it doesn't:
my %hash1 = (
'57494' => {
'name' => 'John Smith',
'age' => '9',
'height' => '120'
},
'57495' => {
'name' => 'Amy Pond',
'age' => '17',
'height' => '168'
}
);
my %hash2 = (
'57494' => {
'name_address' => 'Peter Smith',
'address' => '5 Cambridge Road',
'post_code' => 'CR5 0FS'
}
);
my %h3 = merge( %hash1, %hash2 );
print Dumper \%h3;
__END__
$VAR1 = {
'57495' => undef
};
That is because the merge
from Hash::Merge can only take references, but you are passing it hashes. In addition, you need to call it in scalar context.
Try it like so:
# +--------+--- references
# ,-- SCALAR context | |
my $combined_hash = %{ merge( \%hash1, \%hash2 ) };
print Dumper($combined_hash);