As another person suggested, the various '/'
characters in your regex would need to be escaped with a '\'
because Perl would read them as ending the s///;
prematurely otherwise, causing some errors. You always have to watch out for special characters when dealing with these, as I see you have done with the various periods.
's/ <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1\.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www\.w3\.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional\.dtd">//g'
You can change your delimiters in a s///;
to something else, such as
s###
or s{}{}
to help allieviate the problem, and I generally recommend doing so if you are working with HTML.
Even so, I would say try to simplify the regex as much as practical for the application. Because HTML like this can be so nasty to work with, try using a non-greedy match anything sort of regex, but using the <
and >
to capture specific tags. For example, you might use a regex such as this...
s{<!DOCTYPE .*?>}{}s
and somewhat explaind format...
s{
<!DOCTYPE # opening doctype tag
\s # one whitepsace
.*? # anything (even newlines because of /s flag) non-greedily
> # until the first closing greater than
}{}xs; # x is ignore whitespace, s is have '.' match anything (even \n)
This example uses the /x
flag to comment it out and explain everything, but if you are doing this on the command line this woudl not be necessary.
I cannot speak as to the rest of the portion of your question as I'm not that familiar with shell commands, only to the regex portion.
/g
, though? I've not some across many HTML documents that had multiple doctypes.