Perl Programming/Numbers

Numbers
Numbers in Perl do not have to be enclosed in any kind of punctuation; they can be written as straight numbers.

Floating-point numbers
Here are some acceptable floating point numbers:

0.1, -3.14, 2.71828…

Integers
Integers are all whole numbers and their negatives (and 0): {… -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, …}.

Here are a few examples of integers:

12, -50, 20, 185, -6654, 6654

The following examples are not integers:

15.5, -3.458, 3/2, 0.5

Non-decimal numbers
I'll dwell on this topic for a little longer than the other types of numbers. In Perl you can specify not only decimal numbers, but also numbers in hex, octal, and binary. If you are not familiar with how these systems work, you can try these Wikipedia articles:


 * Hexadecimal
 * Octal
 * Binary

In Perl you have to specify when you are going to write a non-decimal number. Binary numbers start with an 0b, so here are some possible binary numbers:

0b101011101

0b10

Octal numbers start with 0 ("zero"), so here are some possible octal numbers:

015462

062657

012

Hexadecimal numbers start with 0x, so here are some possible hexadecimal numbers:

0xF17A

0xFFFF

Number Operators
Just like strings, numbers have operators. These operators are quite obvious so I'll just give a quick example of each one.

The +, -, /, and * operators
These operators are pretty obvious, but here are some examples:

100 + 1 # That's 101 100 - 1 # That's 99 100/2 # That's 50 100*2 # That's 200

Perl also has the familiar increment, decrement, plus-equals, and minus-equals operators from C: $a++   # evaluate, then increment ++$a   # increment, then evaluate $a--   # evaluate, then decrement --$a   # decrement, then evaluate $a += 5 # plus-equals operator, adds 5 to $a. Equivalent to $a = $a + 5 $a -= 2 # minus-equals operator, subtracts 2 from $a. Equivalent to $a = $a-2

Now let's look at one more operator that's a little less obvious.

The ** Operator
The ** operator is simply the exponentiation operator. Here's another example:

2**4 # That's 16, same as 24 4**3**2 # that's 4**(3**2), or 49, or 262144

Exercises

 * Remember the x operator? Use a mathematical expression as the number of times to repeat the string, see what happens.
 * Write a program like our original hello world program except make it print a mathematical expression.

Perl/Números