There are actually two questions here: "Why is my code doing that" and "How do I do what I want". First the "Why".

You read a line at a time, so far so good. Then, for each line, you split the line on whitespace to generate a list of words (in @line?). Then you print the second word in the list - that is, you print the second word from each line - with no whitespace.

What you want to do is find each word with a p in it. "Find each" should generally fire the grep neuron in your brain. Consider:

#!usr/bin/env perl use warnings; use strict; while (<DATA>) { my @words = split (); my @pWords = grep {/p/i} @words; print "Line $. contains "; if (@pWords) { print "the following words containing p: @pWords\n"; } else { print "no words containing p\n"; } } __DATA__ CPAN stands for comprehensive Perl Archive Network. ^ and $ are used as anchors in a regular expression. /pattern/ is a pattern match operator. Perl is very easy to learn. Enter 'H' or 'h' for help.

Prints:

Line 1 contains the following words containing p: CPAN comprehensive P +erl Line 2 contains the following words containing p: expression. Line 3 contains the following words containing p: /pattern/ pattern op +erator. Line 4 contains the following words containing p: Perl Line 5 contains the following words containing p: help.

Perl is environmentally friendly - it saves trees

In reply to Re: Help with split() function by GrandFather
in thread Help with split() function by negzero7

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