Hello alphacoorg, and welcome to the Monastery!

$s=~/([^ :]+)/g

The square brackets create a bracketed character class and the initial ^ (caret) negates what follows, so this character class matches any character other than a space or a colon. The + quantifier means one or more, and the surrounding parentheses create a capture group. Finally, the /g modifier creates a global match, and since the expression is evaluated in list context, the global match returns a list of matches.

That is, the regular expression returns a list of the substrings in '   ABC: 123 xyz: 100    def: YYY    aaa: ZZZ' that do not contain space or colon characters:

("ABC", 123, "xyz", 100, "def", "YYY", "aaa", "ZZZ")

(You can verify this yourself by assigning the output of the regular expression to an array instead of a hash, and then printing out the array.)

In Perl, assigning a list to a hash populates the hash with key/value pairs taken in sequence from the list. So in this case, the hash is created with entries:

"ABC" => 123, "xyz" => 100, etc.

(Note that Perl’s “fat comma” =>, which is what you normally use when assigning key/value pairs to a hash, is really just an ordinary comma, functioning as a list separator, with the additional property that the expression on its left-hand side is turned into a string.)

Hope that helps,

Athanasius <°(((><contra mundum Iustus alius egestas vitae, eros Piratica,


In reply to Re^3: extracting the key value pairs from a string by Athanasius
in thread extracting the key value pairs from a string by mnranjeeth

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