That will replace a / with a \, but only one. Quite likely you need to replace many. The /g switch does that, but there is another trick it is worth knowing (many actually, but we'll focus on just this one). Consider:

my $doc = 'This /and/ that.'; $doc =~ s!/!\\!g; print $doc;

Prints:

This \and\ that.

Note the use of ! to delimit the regex parts to avoid the picket fence effect you get using the default / and needing to quote stuff with \.

For more regex goodness see perlretut and perlre.


Perl's payment curve coincides with its learning curve.

In reply to Re: Regular Expressions Problem by GrandFather
in thread Regular Expressions Problem by SteveS832001

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