if ($var =~ /^\s+$/)
{
#do something.
}
Explanation: the =~ makes a regular expression bind against a var, instead of $_
/ / delimit the regexp. ^ denotes the beginning of a string, $ the end.
\s+ means one or more whitespace characters, which is space, \n, \t, \v, or \r.
So the whole thing means: do something if, in this var, there's nothing but whitespance between the beginning and end of the contents.
Check out perlre. Regular expressions are good.
Enjoy
Trinary
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