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I have a Perl substitution which converts hyperlinks to lowercase:

's/(?<=<a href=")([^"]+)(?=")/\L$1/g'

I want the substitution to ignore any links which begin with a hash, for example I want it to change the path in <a href="FooBar/Foo.bar">Foo Bar</a> to lowercase but skip if it comes across <a href="#Bar">Bar</a>.

Nesting lookaheads to instruct it to skip these links isn't working correctly for me. This is the one-liner I've written:

perl -pi -e 's/(?<=<a href=" (?! (?<=<a href="#) ) )([^"]+)(?=")/\L$1/g' *;

Could anyone hint to me where I have gone wrong with this substitution? It executes just fine, but does not do anything.

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  • I can't test this right now myself... Have you tried (?<=<a href=")(?<!#)([^"]+)(?=") (match everything that doesn't start with # but is preceded by <a href=") or maybe (?<=<a href=")(?<!<a href="#)([^"]+)(?=")? I don't think nesting is neccessary at all with lookarounds as they have zero length.
    – SvenS
    Oct 10, 2011 at 13:34
  • I read the article on lookarounds at PerlMonks so was trying to follow their examples - it's good to know that nesting may not be necessary though. Unfortunately those substitutions force lowercase on the hash links as well, but thank you for your guidance nonetheless.
    – user960928
    Oct 10, 2011 at 13:51
  • By the way, you did put the spaces into your string for visibility, didn't you?
    – SvenS
    Oct 10, 2011 at 14:13

2 Answers 2

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As near as I can tell, your initial regex will work just fine, if you add the condition that the first character in the link may not be a hash # or a double quote, e.g. [^#"]

s/(?<=<a href=")([^#"][^"]+)(?=")/\L$1/gi;

In the case you have links which do not start with a hash, e.g. <a href="FooBar/Foo.bar#BarBar">Foo Bar</a>, it becomes slightly more complicated:

s{(?<=<a href=")([^#"]+)(#[^"]+)*(?=")}{ lc($1) . ($2 // "") }gei;

We now have to evaluate the substitution, since otherwise we get undefined variable warnings when the optional anchor reference is not present.

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  • Thank you TLP. Once again you prove that there is always a cleaner, simpler solution to a problem.
    – user960928
    Oct 10, 2011 at 14:26
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You don't need look-arounds, from what I see

use 5.010;
...

s/<a \s+ href \s* = \s* "\K([^#"][^"]*)"/\L$1"/gx;

\K means "keep" everything before it. It amounts to a variable-length look-behind.

perlre:

For various reasons \K may be significantly more efficient than the equivalent (?<=...) construct, and it is especially useful in situations where you want to efficiently remove something following something else in a string.

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  • I'll stick with my current solution because I'm more familiar with the syntax, but thank you. It's always nice to learn the many ways of solving a single problem in Perl.
    – user960928
    Oct 11, 2011 at 7:23

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