http://qs321.pair.com?node_id=11141603

ibm1620 has asked for the wisdom of the Perl Monks concerning the following question:

I want to split up an ASCII text document into words (as recognized by /b{wb}), strings of the non-word characters between words, and strings of newlines.

The following code almost works, but instead of treating the newlines as separate tokens, it leaves them appended to the preceding word

#!/usr/bin/env perl use strict; use warnings; my $book = do {local $/; <DATA>}; # slurp the book # Split book into words (delimited by \b{wb}), sequences of newlines, # and sequences of anything else. while ($book =~ /( ( \W+ ) | ( \b{wb}.+?\b{wb} ) | ( \n+ ) ) /xg) { show($1); } print "\n"; # show(): make spaces and newlines visible sub show { my $str = shift; $str =~ tr/\n/$/; $str =~ tr/ /_/; print "{$str}\n"; } __DATA__ --First paragraph-- Second one's followed by only one newline. "Hello," she said, "How's t +ricks?" Third paragraph doesn't end with any punctuation ... and the splitting + works 4th one is separated by two newlines. The End.

The output is:

{--} {First} {_} {paragraph} {--$} <- The newline ('$') should be separate group {Second} {_} {one's} {_} {followed} {_} {by} {_} {only} {_} {one} {_} {newline} {._"} {Hello} {,"_} {she} {_} {said} {,_"} {How's} {_} {tricks} {?"$$} <- the two newlines should be a separate group {Third} {_} {paragraph} {_} {doesn't} {_} {end} {_} {with} {_} {any} {_} {punctuation} {_..._} {and} {_} {the} {_} {splitting} {_} {works} <- Correctly {$$} <- split {4th} {_} {one} {_} {is} {_} {separated} {_} {by} {_} {two} {_} {newlines} {.$$_________} <- should be three separate groups {The} {_} {End} {.$}

I'm wondering what I'm doing wrong, and whether there's a better solution. (Would the split function be preferable?)