Regarding:
        ...it WILL stop matching on the first line.
       You gotta let 'er match the entire string.

Nope. (Did you test your assertion before posting?)

Viz:

my $s = "line1\r\nline2\r\nline3\r\n"; print $s; $s =~ s/[\n\r]//g; print $s;
Prints:
line1 line2 line3 line1line2line3
It's good that you are alert to the pitfalls of matching in multi-line strings. (They can catch you off guard.) But your assertion perpetuates a common confusion that is only confusing if you let it be.

Here's what both perlman:perlre and/or a quick test script will show you:

/s simply allows . to match end-of-line chars anywhere in the string (if needed) /m simply allows ^ and $ to match begin/end of lines in mid-string instead of only the begin/end of the entire string. /g is happy to repeat searching over several lines m// (simple search) will find something that occurs on a line after the first one \n \r will both be found (if present) without resorting to /s or /m

In reply to Useless use of /s and /m in a harmless context by dvergin
in thread Replacing new line characters from HTML TEXTAREA submissions by Anonymous Monk

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