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?
3 Answers
$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.
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How is the latter way "loopy"? It just traverses the string once, right?– TimJun 26, 2011 at 10:42
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@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.– TLPJun 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.– DavidOJun 26, 2011 at 14:51
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!
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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.– DavidOJun 26, 2011 at 6:51
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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.– DavidOJun 28, 2011 at 19:03
Short answer: no. You will need to perform the substitutions in a loop of some kind.
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2
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1That'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
re.sub(repl, string[, count=0])
, but this, obviously, is not what you are after.