Unrelated but you need to use "<code></code>" tags (or, ironically, you may use "<c></c>" instead) to delimit your sample code otherwise things get treated as markup. I believe you meant: $TXT =~ s/[\x00-\x08\x0b\x0c\x0e-\x1f\x7f]+/<c>/g;

In that context (the substitution side of an s/// statement) it means the literal string "<c>" (less than '<', a 'c', and greater than '>'). Probably (looking at the regex side) someone was using it to mark control characters in the input.

$ perl -E '$TXT = qq{\cD\cAFoo\x1e};$TXT =~ s/[\x00-\x08\x0b\x0c\x0e-\ +x1f\x7f]+/<c>/g;say $TXT' <c>Foo<c>

Edit: Rather than trying to do something like this yourself if you're on some flavour of *NIX the od utility can be useful for producing an annotated dump translating non-printable ASCII to standard names (I like od -xa output myself).

The cake is a lie.
The cake is a lie.
The cake is a lie.


In reply to Re: what means this <c> ??? by Fletch
in thread what means this <c> ??? by katador_amf

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