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Homework and Emergencies Emergency UNIX and Linux Support Venn Data Maker Post 302979855 by jacobs.smith on Friday 19th of August 2016 05:10:25 PM
Old 08-19-2016
Quote:
Originally Posted by RudiC
So, with 7 sets there should be 127 lines, no? And the sum of individual set counts should be equal to the No. of lines?

Should g2,1,1,0,1,1,1,1,1 from RavinderSingh13's example be in Set1245678 or in Set12, Set14, Set15, ..., Set78?
Hi R.Singh,

I checked it with the input file.

But the number of lines in the output.txt doesn't reach to be 127.

I guess, it is printing only the values where there is a common or unique set.

However, I would like to see all combination values.

Thanks
 

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Sort::Key::Maker(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				     Sort::Key::Maker(3pm)

NAME
Sort::Key::Maker - multikey sorter creator SYNOPSYS
# create a function that sorts strings by length: use Sort::Key::Maker sort_by_length => sub { length $_}, qw(integer); # create a multikey sort function; # first key is integer sorted in descending order, # second key is a string in default (ascending) order: use Sort::Key::Maker ri_s_keysort => qw(-integer string); # some sample data... my @foo = qw(foo bar t too tood mama); # and now, use the sorter functions previously made: # get the values on @foo sorted by length: my @sorted = sort_by_length @foo; # sort @foo inplace by its length and then by its value: ri_s_keysort_inplace { length $_, $_ } @foo; DESCRIPTION
Sort::Key::Maker is a pragmatic module that provides an easy to use interface to Sort::Key multikey sorting functionality. It creates multikey sorting functions on the fly for any key type combination and exports them to the caller package. The key types natively accepted are: string, str, locale, loc, integer, int, unsigned_integer, uint, number, num and support for other types can be added via Sort::Key::Register (or also via Sort::Key::register_type()). USAGE use Sort::Key::Maker foo_sort => @keys; exports two subroutines to the caller package: "foo_sort (&@)" and "foo_sort_inplace (&@)". Those two subroutines require a sub reference as their first argument and then respectively, the list to be sorted or an array. For instance: use Sort::Key::Maker bar_sort => qw(int int str); @bar=qw(doo tomo 45s tio); @sorted = bar_sort { unpack "CCs", $_ } @bar; # or sorting @bar inplace bar_sort_inplace { unpack "CCs", $_ } @bar; use Sort::Key::Maker foo_sort => &genmultikey, @keys; when the first argument after the sorter name is a reference to a subroutine it is used as the multikey extraction function. The generated sorter functions doesn't require neither accept one, i.e.: use Sort::Key::Maker sort_by_length => sub { length $_ }, 'int'; my @sorted = sort_by_length qw(foo goo h mama picasso); SEE ALSO
Sort::Key, Sort::Key::Register. Sort::Maker also available from CPAN provides similar functionality. AUTHOR
Salvador Fandin~o, <sfandino@yahoo.com> COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2005 by Salvador Fandin~o This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.4 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available. perl v5.14.2 2010-04-16 Sort::Key::Maker(3pm)
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