I disagree slightly with your narrative. A split pattern of  /(?m)\n(?=$)/ will split on any newline that is followed immediately by a newline (i.e., consequtive newlines) or on a newline at the end of the string (producing an empty string). This can be seen to be happening with modified text (and with a split LIMIT of -1 to preserve trailing null fields):

c:\@Work\Perl\monks>perl use strict; use warnings; use feature 'say'; my $s = <<'EOF'; int t; //variable t t->a=0; //t->a does;; something printf("\nEnter the Employee Name : "); scanf("%s", ptr->name); return 0; EOF for my $line (split/(?m)\n(?=$)/, $s, -1) { say '<' . $line . '>', "\n"; } __END__ <int t; //variable t t->a=0; //t->a does;; something> < printf("\nEnter the Employee Name : "); scanf("%s", ptr->name); return 0;> <>

I agree that the simplest and best approach is to split on what the OPer wants to split on, i.e., newlines, and forget about the  /m modifier and everything else.


Give a man a fish:  <%-{-{-{-<


In reply to Re^2: matching lines in a long string by AnomalousMonk
in thread matching lines in a long string by Cristoforo

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