0

Given the following line;

<tag id='1'><![CDATA[this is a string of text]]><tag id='2'><![CDATA[this is another string of text]]><tag id='3'><![CDATA[this is the last string of text]]>

I'm trying to match the text string inside the CDATA square brackets in a way that returns every match without having to split the line first. I can accomplish this by splitting the line (see below) but am trying to better understand perl regex matching and whether I can accomplish the same using regex.

my $string = qq(<tag id='1'><![CDATA[this is a string of text]]><tag id='2'><![CDATA[this is another string of text]]><tag id='3'><![CDATA[this is the last string of text]]>)
my @splitline = split(/\</, $string);
foreach(@splitline){
   if ($_ =~ /\!\[CDATA\[(.*?)\]\]/){
      print "$1\n";
   }
}

The result of above is

this is a string of text

this is another string of text

this is the last string of text

If I try this, it only returns the first match.

my $string = qq(<tag id='1'><![CDATA[this is a string of text]]><tag id='2'><![CDATA[this is another string of text]]><tag id='3'><![CDATA[this is the last string of text]]>)
if ($string =~ /\!\[CDATA\[(.*?)\]\]/){
   print "$1\n";
}

changing my regex to the following returns no data

$string =~ /\!\[CDATA\[(.*?)+\]\]/g
3
  • just use the global modifier to look past the first occurance. \!\[CDATA\[(.*?)\]\]/g Jun 30, 2016 at 20:25
  • thanks for the comments. toolic - this is a small part of a script where i just need to grab the string text and have no use for the other xml data so i'm trying to avoid an xml parser. @TemporalWolf - added detail, i think my question is slightly different. ChrisDoyle - see my edited post, this does not work but i'm not sure why.
    – Matt M
    Jun 30, 2016 at 20:36

2 Answers 2

2

The issue is you are calling the match in scalar context (I.E with the if statement). Instead you should call it in list context and load all the matches into an array. then you can check the array after and print the results.

my $string = qq(<tag id='1'><![CDATA[this is a string of text]]><tag id='2'><![CDATA[this is another string of text]]><tag id='3'><![CDATA[this is the last string of text]]>);

my @matches = $string =~ /\!\[CDATA\[(.*?)\]\]/g;

print join("\n",@matches) if @matches;

OUTPUT

this is a string of text
this is another string of text
this is the last string of text

if you really want to call it in scalar context then you will need to iterate ver all the matches as the perl documentation states that in scalar contect it will track the position of each match.

my $string = qq(<tag id='1'><![CDATA[this is a string of text]]><tag id='2'><![CDATA[this is another string of text]]><tag id='3'><![CDATA[this is the last string of text]]>);

while ($string =~ /\!\[CDATA\[(.*?)\]\]/g){
    print "$1\n";
}
0
2

Use the "repeated matching" capability in Perl, while(.../g...:

Change

if ($string =~ /\!\[CDATA\[(.*?)\]\]/){

to

while ($string =~ /\!\[CDATA\[(.*?)\]\]/g){

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.