A perl idiom of exceeding power and grace, the Schwartzian transform is a method for sorting a data structure on an arbitrary key efficiently1 and with a minimum amount of perl code.

The classic ST always takes the form of

     map { } sort { } map { }
but, in general, any sequence of cascaded maps is considered to be a Schwartzian transform. The canonical ST2 is
    @new = map { $_->[0] }
        sort { $b->[1] <=> $a->[1]
                       ||
               $a->[2] cmp $b->[2]
        } map { [$_, /=(\d+)/, uc($_)] } @old;

This3 ST sorts a list of files by size

   @sorted_by_size =
       map { $_->[0] }
       sort { $a->[1] <=> $b->[1] }
       map { [$_, -s] }
          @files;
but with only one call to stat(2) per file rather than the n log n calls you'd get from this
  @sorted_by_size = sort { -s $a <=> -s $b } @files;

It is important to note that using a Schwartzian transform doesn't automatically guarantee that your code is going to be fast or efficient. Nothing can help you if you write code like this

map {
  for my $item (@some_big_ass_list) {
    do_something_expensive($_, $item);
  }
} @some_big_ass_list;

In principle, any for() loop can be turned into an ST, but sometimes amazing contortions are required. This example should have been left as a for loop.

my $o;
map {
  $o = shift;
  for (@$_) {
    ($_->{name})=$o->fetch_name();
    ($_->{hist})=$o->fetch_hist();
    prep_final($_);    # one $_
  }
  finish($_);          # a different $_
} map { [ $_, @{$_->fetch_list()}]} @list_of_objects;

1 Where efficiently is defined as 'with no named temps'
2 online documentation for perl 5.6.0
3 From Effective Perl Programming by Joseph Hall