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Home/ Questions/Q 8784347
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 13, 20262026-06-13T21:03:50+00:00 2026-06-13T21:03:50+00:00

I’m playing a bit with the Net::Amazon::EC2 libraries, and can’t find out a simple

  • 0

I’m playing a bit with the Net::Amazon::EC2 libraries, and can’t find out a simple way to print object properties:

This works:

my $snaps = $ec2->describe_snapshots();
foreach my $snap ( @$snaps ) {
  print $snap->snapshot_id . " " .  $snap->volume_id . "\n";
}

But if I try:

 print "$snap->snapshot_id $snap->volume_id \n";

I get

Net::Amazon::EC2::Snapshot=HASH(0x4c1be90)->snapshot_id

Is there a simple way to print the value of the property inside a print?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-13T21:03:51+00:00Added an answer on June 13, 2026 at 9:03 pm

    Not in the way you want to do it. In fact, what you’re doing with $snap->snapshot_id is calling a method (as in sub). Perl cannot do that inside a double-quoted string. It will interpolate your variable $snap. That becomes something like HASH(0x1234567) because that is what it is: a blessed reference of a hash.

    The interpolation only works with scalars (and arrays, but I’ll omit that). You can go:

    print "$foo $bar"; # scalar
    print "$hash->{key}"; # scalar inside a hashref
    print "$hash->{key}->{moreKeys}->[0]"; # scalar in an array ref in a hashref...
    

    There is one way to do it, though: You can reference and dereference it inside the quoted string, like I do here:

    use DateTime;
    my $dt = DateTime->now();
    print "${\$dt->epoch }"; # both these
    print "@{[$dt->epoch]}"; # examples work
    

    But that looks rather ugly, so I would not recommend it. Use your first approach instead!

    If you’re still interested in how it works, you might also want to look at these Perl FAQs:

    • What’s wrong with always quoting “$vars”?
    • How do I expand function calls in a string?

    From perlref:

    Here’s a trick for interpolating a subroutine call into a string:

    print "My sub returned @{[mysub(1,2,3)]} that time.\n";
    

    The way it works is that when the @{…} is seen in the double-quoted
    string, it’s evaluated as a block. The block creates a reference to an
    anonymous array containing the results of the call to mysub(1,2,3) .
    So the whole block returns a reference to an array, which is then
    dereferenced by @{…} and stuck into the double-quoted string. This
    chicanery is also useful for arbitrary expressions:

    print "That yields @{[$n + 5]} widgets\n";
    

    Similarly, an expression that returns a reference to a scalar can be
    dereferenced via ${…} . Thus, the above expression may be written
    as:

    print "That yields ${\($n + 5)} widgets\n";
    
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