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I have a string like this $data = .|abc|bcd|cde|.

I need the string like this : abc|bcd|cde.

So I do :

$data =~ s/\|$//; # trim the last '|' out... $data =~ s/^\.| +//gm ; #trim '.' in the begining $data =~ s/^\|//; # trim '|' in the begining

But the problem I am facing is, the script is taking too long to execute. Is there any way to complete the whole operation with a single command ??

(Also tried chop($data) but that takes out only the last |)

Please suggest...

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  • Does $data always start with .| and end in |? Mar 27, 2014 at 12:36

2 Answers 2

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$data =~ s/(^[.|]*)|([.|]*$)//g;

That said, I don't assume that this will speed up your script significantly.

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  • Tried this one but the result is like this : |abc|bcd|cde ... The '.' and the last '|' is gone but the '|' after the '.' remains. @Rene Mar 27, 2014 at 12:38
  • I have edited my answer and you might have tried with my old version (where I have forgotten the first *). Mar 27, 2014 at 12:45
  • but you were right, this isnt much on the speed. But when I dont trim my string, the script is very fast but the '.|' in the beginging gives me all the unwanted data as well (I'm using this string for a egrep command). Mar 27, 2014 at 13:04
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    @user3446683: Calling external commands is slow. Implementing everything in one language tends to be faster.
    – choroba
    Mar 27, 2014 at 13:14
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    If your script is slow it's probably not because of this substitution! Mar 27, 2014 at 13:30
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Another way: $data =~ s/^\.\|(.*)\|/$1/

But as Rene said, your speed bottleneck is probably somewhere else in your script.

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