Not really.
If there is a line in the input data that has neither a > or a { it will produce a wrong result.
produces the outputuse strict; use warnings; while (<DATA>) { $_ =~ m/\{/g; my $str = $`; my $str1=$'; $str=~ s/\>//g; print $str."{".$str1; } __DATA__ testline1 EVITE LA ENFERMEDAD PERIODONTAL< EVITE LA ENFERMEDAD PERIODONTAL< AS {IT}CTIQUE LA HIGIENE DENTAL PARA CUIDAR SUS ENCĂ testline2 testline3
Use of uninitialized value in substitution (s///) at ... Use of uninitialized value in concatenation (.) or string at ... <snip other warnings> {{{{IT}CTIQUE LA HIGIENE DENTAL PARA CUIDAR SUS ENCĂ <snip more warnings> {IT}CTIQUE LA HIGIENE DENTAL PARA CUIDAR SUS ENCĂ <snip more warnings> {IT}CTIQUE LA HIGIENE DENTAL PARA CUIDAR SUS ENCĂ
cheers, si_lence
I apologize for the lack of exclamation marks in this postIn reply to Re^2: Delete till end of line to another string
by si_lence
in thread Delete till end of line to another string
by Anonymous Monk
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