This avoids the temporary variable, and looks pretty readable to me.#!/usr/bin/perl use warnings; use strict; use Data::Dumper; my $array_ref = [qw/one two three four/]; $array_ref->[1] =~ s/w//g; print Dumper($array_ref);
Ignore me — I didn't see the capturing parentheses. {sigh}. /me goes to find coffee.
Update: I'd probably write it like this:
The temporary variable you're talking about is automatically created (called "$1") containing the contents of the capturing parentheses. If you had more than one capturing set, they'd be returned as ($1, $2) (ie the match operation returns an#!/usr/bin/perl use warnings; use strict; use Data::Dumper; sub foo { my $array_ref = ["foo" , "enum('bar,baz')"]; if($array_ref->[1] =~ /enum\('(.*?)'\)/) { return split ",", $1; } } print Dumper(foo());
In reply to Re: Confusion with context
by davis
in thread Confusion with context
by thinker
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