Your solution which adds R? to the original regex was on the right track and achieves what you want, albeit poorly:

$ perl -Mstrict -Mwarnings -E 'my $fileName; my $re = qr{3B4[0|1|2]RT\.\d{10}\.\d+R?\.bin}; $fileName = "3B40RT.2000033121.7.bin.gz"; say +($fileName =~ /$re/) ? "match" : "no match"; $fileName = "3B40RT.2000033121.7R.bin.gz"; say +($fileName =~ /$re/) ? "match" : "no match"; ' match match

I don't think you understand character classes or alternation (perhaps both). Where you're trying to match a 0, 1 or 2 in the same position, [0-2] would be far better than [0|1|2] (which is trying to match a 0, pipe, 1, pipe or 2 in the same position) - the 2nd pipe is redundant and the 1st pipe isn't wanted anyway. So, here's an improved version:

$ perl -Mstrict -Mwarnings -E 'my $fileName; my $re = qr{3B4[0-2]RT\.\d{10}\.\d+R?\.bin}; $fileName = "3B40RT.2000033121.7.bin.gz"; say +($fileName =~ /$re/) ? "match" : "no match"; $fileName = "3B40RT.2000033121.7R.bin.gz"; say +($fileName =~ /$re/) ? "match" : "no match"; ' match match

Recommended reading:

-- Ken


In reply to Re^3: Another Pattern Matching Question by kcott
in thread Another Pattern Matching Question by surib

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