There's really not much wrong with your sample code, if I understand your intent correctly:
perl -E "my $string = 'abc efg hijk lmnop'; if($string !=~ m/defg/) {s +ay $string;}" abc efg hijk lmnop

If it does the job without side-effects, it's probably correct!

But is there some reason you couldn't have answered this yourself... or at least satisfied yourself that your code does or does not work?

Update on my oops: TY, Athanasius who pointed out my typo and, implicitly, that -E does not invoke warnings, whose use would have also pointed out my mistook. With a

use warnings;<c> added to the one-liner this is evident:</p> <c>!=~ should be !~ at -e line 1. Use of uninitialized value $_ in pattern match (m//) at -e line 1. Argument "abc efg hijk lmnop" isn't numeric in numeric ne (!=) at -e l +ine 1.

With the correction, and a more generous example of strings, however, IJW:

C:\>perl -E "use warnings; my @strings = ('12345 defg', 'abc efg hijk +lmnop', 'xyz defg abc'); for my $string(@strings) { if($string !~ m/d +efg/) {say $string;}}" abc efg hijk lmnop

Which just goes to say, OP had the "not much wrong" idea.


In reply to Re: regular expression inverse match NOT match? by ww
in thread regular expression inverse match NOT match? by virtuemart2

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