I'd suggest matching after the unique id...

This works, but is oogly.

#!/usr/bin/perl @chumptastic = <DATA>; $chumpstain = join "\n", @chumptastic; $chumpstain =~ m/bakjob2_details .+? credit .+? # The ? makes these minimal matches; # thus catching the nearest match. customer2\ =\ (-?\d+\.?\d*),/sx; # Modified s to treat it as one string # (. matches newlines) print "$1\n"; __DATA__ # Your Data goes here

Compressed, the regex looks like this: /bakjob2_details.+?credit.+?customer2 = (-?\d+\.?\d*),/s

for(split(" ","tsuJ rehtonA lreP rekcaH")){print reverse . " "}print "\b.\n";

In reply to Re: Pattern Matching - a Tricky one by pobocks
in thread Pattern Matching - a Tricky one by John007

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