For your case I think
1 while s/// is as good as its going to get. Howver, if you wanted to match patterns that overlap the following code is fun to play with:
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use strict;
$_ = '1ab2ab3ab4';
# ^^^^
# ^^^^
# ^^^^
# three substrings match /\dab\d/
my @nonoverlap = /\dab\d/g; # this will only find two of them
my @overlap;
while (/(\dab\d)/g) { # this will find all three
push(@overlap,$1);
pos($_) = $-[0] + 1;
}
print "nonoverlap: @nonoverlap\n"; # 1ab2 3ab4
print "overlap: @overlap\n"; # 1ab2 2ab3 3ab4
The pos() assignment trick to find overlapping matches comes straight of out
chapter 6 of japhys book which is probably the best /g documentation out there.
-Blake
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