Is there a way of taking, say,/(\d\s+foo)[^\r\n]*(\d\s+foo)/
What about:
my $re = qr/\d\s+foo/; sub match { local $_ = shift; /(\d\s+foo)[^\r\n]*\1/x and print "1\n"; /\d\s+foo [^\r\n]*\d\s+foo/x and print "2\n"; /($re) [^\r\n]*\1/x and print "3\n"; /$re [^\r\n]*$re/x and print "4\n"; } match '4 foo4 foo'; ## easily matched match '4 foo5 foo'; ## a bit trickier __OUTPUT__ 1 2 3 4 2 4
We can see that all 4 regexps matched the first text but in order to match the second, we can't use the backreference and must resort to other things. I think isolating the common part and using it where necessary ("4") is best.
--
David Serrano
In reply to Re: PCRE: Repeating Subpattens After Intervening Characters
by Hue-Bond
in thread PCRE: Repeating Subpattens After Intervening Characters
by schnarff
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