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Home/ Questions/Q 541381
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T10:20:15+00:00 2026-05-13T10:20:15+00:00

activePerl 5.8 based #!C:\Perl\bin\perl.exe use strict; use warnings; # declare a new hash my

  • 0

activePerl 5.8 based

#!C:\Perl\bin\perl.exe
use strict;
use warnings;

# declare a new hash
my %some_hash;

%some_hash = ("foo", 35, "bar", 12.4, 2.5, "hello",
      "wilma", 1.72e30, "betty", "bye\n");

my @any_array;
@any_array = %some_hash;

print %some_hash;
print "\n";
print @any_array;
print "\n";
print $any_array[0];
print "\n";
print $any_array[1];
print "\n";
print $any_array[2];
print "\n";
print $any_array[3];
print "\n";
print $any_array[4];
print "\n";
print $any_array[5];
print "\n";
print $any_array[6];
print "\n";
print $any_array[7];
print "\n";
print $any_array[8];
print "\n";
print $any_array[9];

Output as this

D:\learning\perl>test.pl
bettybye
bar12.4wilma1.72e+030foo352.5hello
bettybye
bar12.4wilma1.72e+030foo352.5hello
betty
bye

bar
12.4
wilma
1.72e+030
foo
35
2.5
hello
D:\learning\perl>

What decided the elements print order in my sample code?

Any rule to follow when print a mixed(strings, numbers) hash in Perl? Thank you.

bar12.4wilma1.72e+030foo352.5hello

[Updated]

With you guys help, i updated the code as below.

#!C:\Perl\bin\perl.exe
use strict;
use warnings;

# declare a new hash
my %some_hash;

%some_hash = ("foo", 35, "bar", 12.4, 2.5, "hello",
      "wilma", 1.72e30, "betty", "bye");

my @any_array;
@any_array = %some_hash;

print %some_hash;
print "\n";
print "\n";
print @any_array;
print "\n";
print "\n";

my @keys;
@keys = keys %some_hash;
for my $k (sort @keys)
{
    print $k, $some_hash{$k};
}

output

D:\learning\perl>test.pl
bettybyebar12.4wilma1.72e+030foo352.5hello

bettybyebar12.4wilma1.72e+030foo352.5hello

2.5hellobar12.4bettybyefoo35wilma1.72e+030
D:\learning\perl>

Finially, after called keys and sort functions. The hash keys print followed the rule below

2.5hellobar12.4bettybyefoo35wilma1.72e+030
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T10:20:16+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 10:20 am

    Elements of a hash are printed out in their internal order, which can not be relied upon and will change as elements are added and removed. If you need all of the elements of a hash in some sort of order, sort the keys, and use that list to index the hash.

    If you are looking for a structure that holds its elements in order, either use an array, or use one of the ordered hash’s on CPAN.

    the only ordering you can rely upon from a list context hash expansion is that key => value pairs will be together.

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