Using match time pattern interpolation can avoid the && and it also avoids false positives with overlapping words. I'm not sure you could call it better though. What you have is much easier to understand and maintain.

use strict; use warnings; use re q{eval}; my %alt = ( this => q{that}, that => q{this} ); my $re = do { local $" = q{|}; qr{(?x) ( @{ [ keys %alt ] } ) .* (??{ $alt{ $1 } }) }; }; print sprintf( q{%-9s: }, $_ ), m{$re} ? qq{matched\n} : qq{did not match\n} for qw{ thisthat thatthis thathis thisnthat thatnthis };

The output.

thisthat : matched thatthis : matched thathis : did not match thisnthat: matched thatnthis: matched

I hope this is of interest.

Cheers,

JohnGG

Update: I noticed the i flag on one of the OP's patterns but the above didn't work with mixed case. It is fixed in this version.

use strict; use warnings; use re q{eval}; my %alt = ( this => q{that}, that => q{this} ); my $re = do { local $" = q{|}; qr{(?xi) ( @{ [ keys %alt ] } ) .* (??{ qr{(?xi) $alt{ lc $1 } } }) }; }; print sprintf( q{%-9s: }, $_ ), m{$re} ? qq{matched\n} : qq{did not match\n} for qw{ thisthat thatthis thathis thisnthat thatnthis ThISnthAt };

Which produces

thisthat : matched thatthis : matched thathis : did not match thisnthat: matched thatnthis: matched ThISnthAt: matched

In reply to Re: pattern matching words in any order by johngg
in thread pattern matching words in any order by daveatmcafee

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