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I use a regexp with a set of delimiters to tokenize a book.

my $a='A B?C&D"E.F"G,H;I;J/K/L?M:N';
print $a."\n";
my @b=split( /[ ?&".,;\/]/ , $a );
foreach (@b) {  print"|".$_."|,"; } print"\n";

this already works:

A B?C&D"E.F"G,H;I;J/K/L?M:N
|A|,|B|,|C|,|D|,|E|,|F|,|G|,|H|,|I|,|J|,|K|,|L|,|M:N|,

But what kind of regexp will return only the delimiters from $a to a scalar or list?

my $c = $a =~ REGEXP_I_AM_LOOKING_FOR  --> ' ?&".",;;//?'

Any hint to do this as simple as possible would be greatly appreciated.

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  • ' ?&".",;;//?:' ov course has to be ' ?&".",;;//?'
    – bootware
    Mar 6, 2013 at 20:02
  • Thank You so far. I would prefer to use the negated class. But I got ||,| |,|?|,|&|,|"|,|.|,|"|,|,|,|;|,|;|,|/|,|/|,|?|, Here the element $c[0] is wrong :-( Additional: Is it possible to hold the delimiters in a scalar an use the scalar in the Regexp?
    – bootware
    Mar 6, 2013 at 20:22

4 Answers 4

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Hold the delimiters in a string.

my $input = 'A B?C&D"E.F"G,H;I;J/K/L?M:N';
my $delimiters = ' ?&".",;;//?';

my @found_fields = split( /[$delimiters]/, $input );
print "|$_|," foreach (@found_fields);

Now you can get just the delimiters seen in a string by using a negated character class, which is just this [^...]

my @found_delimiters = split( /[^$delimiters]/, $input );
print "|$_|," foreach (@found_delimiters);
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Split on a negated character class [^...] ?

my @b=split( /[^ ?&".,;\/]/ , $a );

Or use a regular expression with the /g (global) modifier

my @b = /[ ?&".,;\/]/g;
1
  • Can one do this by holding the delimiters in a scalar too?
    – bootware
    Mar 6, 2013 at 20:04
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# ' ', '?', '&', '"', ...
my @seps = $a =~ /([ ?&".,;\/])/g;

or maybe you'd prefer to have:

# 'A', ' ', 'B', '?', 'C', ...
my @both = split /([ ?&".,;\/])/, $a;
0

Another approach without using one-liner regexp.

my @delimiters = ();
while($a =~ /([ ?&\"\.\,\;\/])/g) {
  push(@delimiters, $1);
}

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