Now that your expected output looks more logical, a simple test can illustrate one possible solution.

use strict; use warnings; use Test::More; my @data = ( { have => '/fd/gfree/tere/frf4545/geerg/fds/0.1/fsdf/dsakdsa/', want => '/fd/gfree/tere/frf4545/geerg/fds/0.1', }, { have => '/fd/gfree/tere/frf4545/geerg/dfds/5.9/fdsf/fdsfd/', want => '/fd/gfree/tere/frf4545/geerg/dfds/5.9', }, { have => '/fd/gfree/tere/frf4545/geerg/dsad/02.44/fdsf/fdsf/', want => '/fd/gfree/tere/frf4545/geerg/dsad/02.44', }, ); plan tests => scalar @data; for my $t (@data) { $t->{have} =~ s/(\.\d+).*?$/$1/; is $t->{have}, $t->{want}; }

In reply to Re^3: Pattern replace in a file name by hippo
in thread Pattern replace in a file name by kaushik9918

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