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I have a text file, its content as follows:

a b
c

and I use the below Perl code to substitute underscore '-' char at where ever the space char appears in the input line:

while (<>) {
   $_ =~ s/\s/_/;
   print $_;
}

and I get output like this:

a_b
c_

So my question is why Perl substitutes underscore in the place of newline '\n' char too which is evident from the input line which contains 'c'? When I use chomp in the code it works as expected.

1 Answer 1

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\s matches all white space chars [ \t\r\n\f], so use space if you want to replace plain spaces

$_ =~ s/ /_/g;
# or just
s/ /_/g;

Translation could also be used for such simple substitutions, eg. tr/ /_/;

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  • 1
    Additionally, the original poster is only changing the first occurrence: he may want 'g' at the end if he wants to change all occurrences in the line.
    – kjpires
    Feb 28, 2014 at 22:03

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