How can I check whether a given string contains a certain substring, using Perl?
More specifically, I want to see whether s1.domain.example
is present in the given string variable.
To find out if a string contains substring you can use the index
function:
if (index($str, $substr) != -1) {
print "$str contains $substr\n";
}
It will return the position of the first occurrence of $substr
in $str
, or -1 if the substring is not found.
:
).
Another possibility is to use regular expressions which is what Perl is famous for:
if ($mystring =~ /s1\.domain\.example/) {
print qq("$mystring" contains "s1.domain.example"\n);
}
The backslashes are needed because a .
can match any character. You can get around this by using the \Q
and \E
operators.
my $substring = "s1.domain.example";
if ($mystring =~ /\Q$substring\E/) {
print qq("$mystring" contains "$substring"\n);
}
Or, you can do as eugene y stated and use the index function.
Just a word of warning: Index returns a -1
when it can't find a match instead of an undef
or 0
.
Thus, this is an error:
my $substring = "s1.domain.example";
if (not index($mystring, $substr)) {
print qq("$mystring" doesn't contains "$substring"\n";
}
This will be wrong if s1.domain.example
is at the beginning of your string. I've personally been burned on this more than once.
=~
, index()
, ~~
and match::simple
all seemed a bit awk
-ward ... :-\
domain.com
to match subdomain.domain.com
using the REGEX above, any ideas ?
Case Insensitive Substring Example
This is an extension of Eugene's answer, which converts the strings to lower case before checking for the substring:
if (index(lc($str), lc($substr)) != -1) {
print "$str contains $substr\n";
}