It isn't working for a multiplicity of reasons. First off, your regex is capturing nothing in $1, so you shouldn't be using that var. In same regex, your ^ is misused - ^ should be placed so that it anchors the front of the line - it cannot be preceeded by \b and be sanely used. Your push of @in is unconditional, which is also wrong - you only want to push if the regex matches. Further, you should be using a hash to collect uniq values, not an array. I don't even begin to understand what that grep is trying to do.

This code should be a good start...

#!/usr/bin/perl use Data::Dumper; while (<DATA>) { $in{$1} = 1 if ($_ =~ (/^\s*(\$\w+.*)/)); } @a = keys %in; print Dumper \@a; __DATA__ $first = 1; $first = 1; $second = 2; #some comment # $third = 3;

Please also read this link Perl Idioms Explained - keys %{{map{$_=>1}@list}}.


In reply to Re: parse for string, then print unique by welchavw
in thread parse for string, then print unique by mhearse

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