I created the bit mask from the mask by replacing 0's by \x00 and 1's by \xff. Then, you can use bitwise
& and can easily remove the resulting \x00's:
#!/usr/bin/perl
use warnings;
use strict;
my $string = join q(), map int rand 10, 1 .. 400_000;
my $mask = join q(), map int rand 2, 1 .. 400_000;
$mask =~ tr/01/\x00\xff/;
my $result = $string & $mask;
$result =~ tr/\x00//d;
print $result;
Updated: Using
tr/ instead of
s/ at line 10 speeds the method up.
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