If your strings are always going to be formatted in the same way,it's easy:
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
while(<DATA>) {
chomp;
(my $text, my $numerical) = split(/\./,$_,2);
print "$text: \n";
print "$numerical: \n";
}
__DATA__
abc.1.0.1.0
bnnn.1.0.1.1
dnnnnn.1.0.2.0
Note that this assumes there is a period separating the text part from the numerical part (it looks like a version number to me ;-) ). I also almost always chomp input, mostly because I want to have explicit control over when \n's get inserted and not rely on end-of-record markers in input data.
Information about American English usage here and here. Floating point issues? Please read this before posting. — emc
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