Hopefully this isn't too obfuscated. I've tried to restrain myself here. The trunc_match function creates a regular expression for any given input string, and should handle wierd stuff to by virtue of the qr() operator.
sub trunc_match { my ($what) = @_; my @bits; for (1..length $what) { push (@bits,$what); chop $what; } return '('.join ('|', map { quotemeta($_) } @bits).')$'; } my $rx = trunc_match ("foobar"); $_ = "This sentence ends in foob"; if (/$rx/) { print "Truncated, ends in '$1'\n"; }
The format of the regex is something like:
(foobar|fooba|foob|foo|fo|f)$
So you get whatever you're looking for in $1, or the returned array if you're brave enough to use /g.

Update:
For some reason, I had confused qr with quotemeta, and so I am updating the code here to be more sensible in that regard. Thanks, once again, Hofmator.

In reply to Re^2: Matching a truncated word by tadman
in thread Matching a truncated word by John M. Dlugosz

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