Getting the words from the character offsets is easy enough with substr. Here's an easily adaptable way to count the words before a particular word in a string for a sufficiently simple definition of 'word':

sub words_before { my ( $word, $string ) = @_; my ( $before ) = $string =~ m/(.*?)\Q$word\E/g; my $words_before = () = $before =~ m/(\S+)/g; return $words_before; }
This can be used such as this:
print 'There are ' . words_before( $word, $string ) . ' words before " +' . $word . '" in the string "' . $string . '"' . "\n";
The word index counting from 0 is the same as the number of words before the given word. Counting from 1, you'll need to add one to that amount.

In reply to Re: character offset to word offset by mr_mischief
in thread character offset to word offset by newbio

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