The best approach differs according to your purposes. The FAQ item mentioned by Sinan is a good resource: How do I test whether two arrays or hashes are equal?. During development and debugging (and of course when writing unit tests) I have found Test::More
to be useful when comparing arrays, hashes, and complex data structures. A simple example:
use strict;
use warnings;
my %some_data = (
a => [1, 2, 'x'],
b => { foo => 'bar', biz => 'buz' },
j => '867-5309',
);
my %other_data = (
a => [1, 2, 'x'],
b => { foo => 'bar', biz => 'buz' },
j => '867-5309x',
);
use Test::More tests => 1;
is_deeply(\%other_data, \%some_data, 'data structures should be the same');
Output:
1..1
not ok 1 - data structures should be the same
# Failed test 'data structures should be the same'
# at _x.pl line 19.
# Structures begin differing at:
# $got->{j} = '867-5309x'
# $expected->{j} = '867-5309'
# Looks like you failed 1 test of 1.
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