The stupid question is the question not asked | |
PerlMonks |
comment on |
( [id://3333]=superdoc: print w/replies, xml ) | Need Help?? |
Then why did the OP say "Can't use a \x variable" instead of "can't use a variable"? If I say "The Western sky is orange", doesn't that tell you something about the Eastern sky? At the very least, I'm leaving the possibility of the Eastern sky being a different colour. In fact, it's quite likely it's either a different colour or I don't know it's colour.
I mean "what is captured". Technically, they exist as a reference to the string being matched, a start position and an end position (or something similar). $1 and \1 are both windows into them, and so are @-, @+, %-,%+ and $^N.
They're not used at all during regex matching. There isn't even a regex opcode to refer to them. The only way they can be accessed is via \1 (etc) and via Perl code blocks ((?{ }) and (??{ }). Neither of those can be used in a quantifier. And if they don't change — if you can't even give them a value — how can you consider them variables? In reply to Re^7: Regex fun
by ikegami
|
|