You have been given two fine solutions with the
/Q ... /E and the
quotemeta built-ins. These two constructs do all the dirty meta-character escaping work for you so that you don't have to worry about the details. And they are especially fine if you are given a search string (for example if it is coming from a file that you read or from user input).
However, for the sake of completeness, I would add that these two operators simply add the \ escaping character before any non-word character (that may otherwise be interpreted as a regex meta-character). If you are building yourself your pattern, you might also add the escaping character before the [ opening square bracket yourself, as shown in the following session under the Perl debugger:
DB<1> $str = "123 A_D1 XYZ A_D1[1] BLAH BLAH";
DB<2> $str =~ s/A_D1\[1]//g;
DB<3> p $str
123 A_D1 XYZ BLAH BLAH
Posts are HTML formatted. Put <p> </p> tags around your paragraphs. Put <code> </code> tags around your code and data!
Titles consisting of a single word are discouraged, and in most cases are disallowed outright.
Read Where should I post X? if you're not absolutely sure you're posting in the right place.
Please read these before you post! —
Posts may use any of the Perl Monks Approved HTML tags:
- a, abbr, b, big, blockquote, br, caption, center, col, colgroup, dd, del, details, div, dl, dt, em, font, h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6, hr, i, ins, li, ol, p, pre, readmore, small, span, spoiler, strike, strong, sub, summary, sup, table, tbody, td, tfoot, th, thead, tr, tt, u, ul, wbr
You may need to use entities for some characters, as follows. (Exception: Within code tags, you can put the characters literally.)
| |
For: |
|
Use: |
| & | | & |
| < | | < |
| > | | > |
| [ | | [ |
| ] | | ] |
Link using PerlMonks shortcuts! What shortcuts can I use for linking?
See Writeup Formatting Tips and other pages linked from there for more info.