Warning: I don't know if this is a correct solution. But it seems like it works, so I offer it up for criticism, just because it seems nifty:
use strict; use warnings; use Regexp::Common; my $str = "a<<a> a>b<a>c<a>a"; while ($str=~/\G(?:|$RE{balanced}{-parens=>'<>'}) ([^<]+) (?:|$RE{balanced}{-parens=>'<>'})/xg) { # Update: Oops, this uppercases everything except what # the OP wanted :) substr($str, $-[1],$+[1]-$-[1]) = uc $1; pos($str) = $+[1]; }
Update: I should read the OP again. This seems to match, but doesn't change the case like the OP wants. Nevermind (for now) :(

Update: Fixed. Though I'm still not sure if it's absolutely correct :)

Update (simplified solution below):

$str =~ s/(^|\G$RE{balanced}{-parens=>'<>'})([^<]+)/\U$1\E$2/g; # Again? (and now I feel a DUH! coming on (: $str =~ s/($RE{balanced}{-parens=>'<>'})/\U$1/g;

In reply to Re: I don't remember regex seeming this hard before by runrig
in thread I don't remember regex seeming this hard before by danderson

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