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I have the content of file as :

(0872) "ss_current" (1 of 1)
(0873) "ss_current_6oct" (0 of 1)

I want to read each line of file and then get the content between last parentheses i.e.

(1 of 1)
(0 of 1)

and compare the numbers if they are equal i.e. number before and after "of" are equal. My code:

my @cs;
while (<$fh>) {
    if ($_ =~ /\((.*?)\)/) {
        my $temp = $1;
        print $temp, "\n";
    }
}

But this giving the content as 0872 or 0873

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3 Answers 3

5

Your regex is only picking up the first set of brackets. Make it more specific, and you can pick the (1 of 1) or (0 of 1):

while (<$fh>) {
    # \d+ means match one or more adjacent numbers
    # brackets capture the match in $1 and $2
    if ($_ =~ /\((\d+) of (\d+)\)/) {
        if ($1 == $2) {
           # they are equal! print out the line (or do whatever)
           # (the line is set to the special variable $_ while processing the file)
           print "$_";
        }
    }
}
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use strict;
use warnings;

open my $in, '<', 'in.txt';

while(<$in>){
    chomp;
    my ($first, $second) = /\((\d+) of (\d+)\)/;
    print "$first of $second\n" if $first == $second;
}
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Your regex is not specific enough as there are more than one set of parenthesis in each line.

It's possible to use a regex to match the exact condition you're wanting using backreferences.

use strict;
use warnings;

while (<DATA>) {
    print if /\((\d+) of \1\)/;
}

__DATA__
(0872) "ss_current" (1 of 1)
(0873) "ss_current_6oct" (0 of 1)

Outputs:

(0872) "ss_current" (1 of 1)

Note that this is kind of an advanced technique, as one must be sure to enforce boundary conditions to avoid matching a substring in an undesired way. For this reason, I'd actually recommend using a technique like alarmed alien uses if you're a beginner.

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