\X fixes the utf8 problem, but there's still a problem with this regex...

#!/usr/bin/perl -w use strict; use utf8; my($a,$b,$c); $a=$b=$c="123\n456\n"; print chop $a; # prints "\n" print $b =~ s/\X$//; # prints "1" print $a; # prints "123\n456" print $b; # prints "123\n45\n" ## OOPS!!!
i believe s/\X\z// will do what you want, although it still won't return the character removed. instead, use substr EXPR,OFFSET,LEN,REPLACEMENT (i.e. substr $_,-1,1,'').

~Particle *accelerates*


In reply to Re^4: a farewell to chop by particle
in thread a farewell to chop by John M. Dlugosz

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