Regexp::Common is a wonderful module, but I had the impression that
akho was suggesting it as the solution to leave out unwanted trailing characters, like in the example in
akho's post:
use Regexp::Common qw( URI );
$message =~ s#^($RE{URI}{HTTP})#<a href="$1">$1</a>#;
$message =~ s#(?<=\s)($RE{URI}{HTTP})#<a href="$1">$1</a>#g;
My point is only that
Regexp::Common does not help with this issue here, because it does not eliminate the trailing punctuation chars (like yours, see today's logs). And it couldn't be differently, because those punctuation chars are allowed in a HTTP URI, so
$RE{URI}{HTTP} can't help getting it.
Flavio
perl -ple'$_=reverse' <<<ti.xittelop@oivalf
Don't fool yourself.
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