What are you trying to accomplish with the
/g modifier? You are not using it in a very conventional way.
When you use the /g modifier, you update a position within the string from which the next match attempt begins. This position is available by calling pos() on the string:
my $t = "cat hat bat mat";
print pos($t), "\n"; # -> (empty)
$t =~ m/at/g; print pos($t), "\n"; # -> 3
$t =~ m/at/g; print pos($t), "\n"; # -> 7
$t =~ m/at/g; print pos($t), "\n"; # -> 11
$t =~ m/hat/g; print pos($t), "\n"; # -> (empty)
$t =~ m/at/g; print pos($t), "\n"; # -> 3
For the first three matches you see
pos() advancing along the string. The match
m/hat/g fails because
pos() is already past
hat. This failure also causes the next match to start at the beginning of the string.
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