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in reply to Re: Re: Re: conditional match in regex
in thread conditional match in regex

Right, this way $1 = type and $3 = name.  Oh well...

  p
  • Comment on Re: Re: Re: Re: conditional match in regex

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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: conditional match in regex
by jryan (Vicar) on Nov 06, 2002 at 08:09 UTC

    Actually, $1 = type if the type is $, @, %, or *; however, in the <name> case, the only way to check its type is by nested conditionals outside the regex; something like:

    if ($2) { if ($1 eq '$') { ... } elsif ($1 eq '@') { ... } ... } else { ... }

    Which, IMHO, is a huge pain in the behind compared to a single if-elsif chain. Why do more work than you have to?

      The problem seems to be stated: either $val or <val>:
      $ perl -le'$_=pop;/([\$@*%]|(<))(.*)(?(2)>)/;print"($1)($3)"' '$xyz' ($)(xyz) $ perl -le'$_=pop;/([\$@*%]|(<))(.*)(?(2)>)/;print"($1)($3)"' '$xyz>' ($)(xyz>) $ perl -le'$_=pop;/([\$@*%]|(<))(.*)(?(2)>)/;print"($1)($3)"' '<xyz>' (<)(xyz)


        p
        '$xyz>' is definately NOT a valid symbol table entry.