I see. If you have tags already in your data and want to skip over them then the best plan is to use a proper HTML parser.

If you cannot (or will not) use a parser then a crude plan B which works for your supplied dataset is:

#!/usr/bin/env perl use strict; use warnings; use Test::More; my @set = ( { in => 'ABCDEFGHI', want => "ABCD\nEFGH\nI\n" }, { in => '<b>ABC</b>DEFGHI', want => "<b>ABC</b>D\nEFGH\nI\n" }, ); plan tests => scalar @set; my $len = 4; for my $x (@set) { my $i = 0; my $out = ''; my $intag = 0; for my $c (split (//, $x->{in})) { $out .= $c; $intag++ if $c eq '<'; $intag-- if $c eq '>'; next if $intag || $c eq '>'; $i++; $out .= "\n" unless $i % $len; } $out .= "\n"; is ($out, $x->{want}); }

This isn't robust (and is rather C-ish for my taste) but it serves to illustrate this approach in general terms. Have fun with it.

Update: edited source for improved generality.


In reply to Re^3: Print N characters per line in Cgi Script with Html Tags by hippo
in thread Print N characters per line in Cgi Script with Html Tags by Diesel

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