The "tr///" operator only works on individual characters,
not on strings. To do what you want, you need to evaluate
the "m//" operator in a list (actually, array) context, and
then count the elements in the resulting array, thusly:
my $str = "The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog";
my @the = ( $str =~ /\bthe\b/gi );
print scalar @the, $/;
That prints "2".
update: It would be clearer (I hope) to say
that "tr///" treats every character in the left-hand
side as a member of a character class; it cannot treat any
sequence of characters as a contiguous string to be matched;
only the "m//" operator (and the "s///" operator) can do
that. Look carefully at the "perlop" man page for more
complete descriptions of these three operators.
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