12

Is it possible to specify the maximum number of matches to replace. For instance if matching 'l' in "Hello World", would it be possible to replace the first 2 'l' characters, but not the third without looping?

4
  • you can with python re.sub(repl, string[, count=0]), but this, obviously, is not what you are after.
    – matchew
    Jun 26, 2011 at 5:21
  • It might be the motivation needed to trade up to Python. Jun 26, 2011 at 6:17
  • 1
    @Quick: Up? Surely, you mean down.
    – TLP
    Jun 26, 2011 at 9:16
  • 2
    I like writing Perl, but I don't especially enjoy reading it back. Jun 26, 2011 at 9:32

3 Answers 3

9
$str = "Hello world!";
$str =~ s/l/r/ for (1,2);
print $str;

I don't see what's so bad about looping.

Actually, here's a way:

$str="Hello world!"; 
$str =~ s/l/$i++ >= 2 ? "l": "r"/eg; 
print $str;

It's a loop, of sorts, since s///g works in a loopy way when you do this. But not a traditional loop.

3
  • How is the latter way "loopy"? It just traverses the string once, right?
    – Tim
    Jun 26, 2011 at 10:42
  • @Tim Nordenfur: It evals each time it finds a match, but yes, only goes through the string once. You could do while (/match/g) to create a loop.
    – TLP
    Jun 26, 2011 at 12:16
  • Every method is a loop. There are explicit loops (the ones that look like 'while' or 'foreach', and implicit loops (the ones that don't have a name but occur behind the scenes.) There's no traversal (even once) without an implicit loop. It's just hidden in the /g clause of the RE engine.
    – DavidO
    Jun 26, 2011 at 14:51
9

Here is one way. This requires an external counter to be updated within the RE using a (?{code}) block inside of a (?(condition)true-sub-expression|false-sub-expression) construct. See perldoc perlre for an explanation.

use Modern::Perl;
use re qw/eval/; # Considered experimental.

my $string = 'Hello world!';

my $count = 2;

my $re =    qr/
                (l)
                (?(?{$count--})|(*FAIL))
            /x;

say "Looking for $count instances of 'l' in $string.";
my ( @found ) = $string =~ m/$re/g;
say "Found ", scalar @found, " instances of 'l': @found";

The output is:

Looking for 2 instances of 'l' in Hello world!
Found 2 instances of 'l': l l

Here's another test of the same regexp, but this time we're keeping track of the position of the matches just to prove it's matching the first two occurrences.

use Modern::Perl;
use strict;
use warnings;
use re qw/eval/; # Considered experimental.

my $string = 'Hello world!';

my $count = 2;
my $position = 0;

my $re =    qr/
                (l)(?{$position=pos})
                (?(?{$count--})|(*FAIL))
            /x;

while( $string =~ m/$re/g ) {
    say "Found $1 at ", $position;
}

And this time the output is:

Found l at 3
Found l at 4

I don't think I would recommend any of this. If I were considering constraining matches to only one portion of a string, I would match against a substr() of the string. But if you like to live on the edge, go ahead and have fun with this snippet.

Here it is in a substitution:

use Modern::Perl;
use strict;
use warnings;
use re qw/eval/; # Considered experimental.

my $string = 'Hello world!';
say "Before substitution $string";
my $count = 2;
my $re =    qr/
                (l)
                (?(?{$count--})|(*FAIL))
            /x;

 $string =~ s/$re/L/g;

 say "After substitution  $string";

And the output:

Before substitution Hello world!
After substitution  HeLLo world!
2
  • One note: I really wanted to run this through YAPE::Regex::Explain to show what was happening, but unfortunately it wasn't producing an accurate description of what is going on.
    – DavidO
    Jun 26, 2011 at 6:51
  • Another comment, if anyone's still reading: Any method that involves a counter embedded within the regexp itself is probably going to be sensitive to backtracking by the RE engine. Just a thought.
    – DavidO
    Jun 28, 2011 at 19:03
0

Short answer: no. You will need to perform the substitutions in a loop of some kind.

2
  • 2
    @re = qw(l l); s/(l)/shift @re || $1/eg;
    – TLP
    Jun 26, 2011 at 10:31
  • 1
    That's cute, but its utility is somewhat limited to only the most trivial of regex patterns. The version you posted in your answer is much more useful. Jun 27, 2011 at 13:27

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.