find out what is idiomatic Perl and what is not

Here's my take on how to make that a bit more idiomatic/modern/whatever:

use warnings; use strict; use IO::Prompt; print "RegEx Engine 1.0\n", "________________\n"; my $str = prompt("Gimme a string: "); my $pattern = prompt("Gimme a RegEx: "); print $str=~$pattern ? "Yes!" : "No.", "\n"; print "kthxbye\n";

(As an alternative to IO::Prompt, you could use ExtUtils::MakeMaker 'prompt'; - ExtUtils::MakeMaker is a core module, even though it has a completely different purpose. Or, there is Term::ReadLine.)

I don't want to end up writing Python in Perl.

But why not? ;-)

use Acme::Pythonic; use warnings use strict use IO::Prompt print("RegEx Engine 1.0\n________________\n") while 1: my $str = prompt("Gimme a string: ") unless length($str): last my $pattern = prompt("Gimme a RegEx: ") if $str=~$pattern: print("Yes!\n") else: print("No.\n") print("kthxbye\n")

In reply to Re: Idiomatic Perl? by haukex
in thread Idiomatic Perl? by thenextfart

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