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Home/ Questions/Q 1088449
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T23:04:19+00:00 2026-05-16T23:04:19+00:00

I’m using dynamic multilevel hashes from which I read data but also writes data.

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I’m using dynamic multilevel hashes from which I read data but also writes data.

A common pitfall for me is accessing non-existing keys (typos, db revisions etc.). I get undefs which propagate to other parts and cause problems. I would like to die whenever I try to read a non-existing key, but still be allowed to add new keys.

So the wanted behavior is:

my %hash;
$hash{A} = 5;  # ok
print $hash{A}, "\n";  # ok
print $hash{X}, "\n";  # should die
$hash{B}{C}{D} = 10; # ok 
print $hash{B}{C}{X}, "\n";  # should die

I previously posted a similar question and got great answers. I especially like the accepted one, which allows using the normal hash syntax. The only problem is I’m not sure how to easily generalize this to deep hashes as in the example above.

p.s.
I find this feature really useful and I wonder if I’m missing something, since it does not seem very popular. Perhaps it is not common to read/write from/to the same hash?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T23:04:19+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 11:04 pm

    With warnings pragma switched on then you do get Use of uninitialized value in print at... warnings at the two lines you want to die.

    So if you make warnings fatal then they would die instead:

    use warnings FATAL => 'all';
    

    Update

    Based on comments you’ve made I assume your common case issue is something along these lines:

    my $x = $hash{B}{C}{X};
    

    Which won’t throw warning/error until you actually use $x later on.

    To get around this then you can do:

    my $x = $hash{B}{C}{X} // 'some default value';
    
    my $z = $hash{B}{C}{Z} // die "Invalid hash value";
    

    Unfortunately the above would mean a lot of extra typing 🙁

    Here is at least a short cut:

    use 5.012;
    use warnings FATAL => 'all';
    use Carp 'croak';
    
    # Value Or Croak!
    sub voc { $_[0] // croak "Invalid hash" }
    

    Then below would croak!

    my $x = voc $hash{B}{C}{X};
    

    Hopefully this and also the fatal warnings are helpful to you.

    /I3az/

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