Whatever you do, make only a single pass over the data. This can be done matching, and using the
/gc modifiers to not reset
pos, and doing the substitutions yourself.
Another possibility is to do just a single substitution, and keep track of what was matched.
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use strict;
use warnings;
my %subs = (
farenheit => sub {
warn "Matched F with $^N\n";
return sprintf("%.u" , ($^N - 32) / 1.8) . 'C'
},
celsius => sub {
warn "Matched C with $^N\n";
return sprintf("%.u" , ($^N * 1.8) + 32) . 'F'
},
);
my $WHAT;
my $regex = qr/
(\d+)F (?{ $WHAT = 'farenheit' })
| (\d+)C (?{ $WHAT = 'celsius' })
/xi;
my $html = do { local $/; <DATA> };
$html =~ s/$regex/$subs{$WHAT}->()/eg;
warn $html;
__DATA__
convert 180F to C
convert 180C to F
Note that this uses a feature that's marked as EXPERIMENTAL in perlre, so be warned.
Also since there are now multiple captures in the same regex, $^N is more robust than using $1, $2 etc.
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