Good point, although in this case those variables also don't allow one to differentiate between the last two matches:

$ perl -MData::Dump -e '$a="abc";for(1..6){ $a=~m/.|$/g; dd \@-,\@+ }' ([0], [1]) ([1], [2]) ([2], [3]) ([3], [3]) ([3], [3]) ([0], [1])

Update: Hmm, well they can if one adds capture groups, which is kind of the same workaround as I showed here.

$ perl -MData::Dump -e '$a="abc";for(1..6){$a=~m/(.|$)/g; dd \@-,\@+}' ([0, 0], [1, 1]) ([1, 1], [2, 2]) ([2, 2], [3, 3]) ([3, 3], [3, 3]) ([3], [3, 3]) ([0, 0], [1, 1])

In reply to Re^6: perl indication of end of string already matched (updated) by haukex
in thread perl indication of end of string already matched by nachumk

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