The  // defined-or operator was introduced in Perl version 5.10, which also introduced the  (?|pattern) "branch reset" extended pattern (see Extended Patterns in perlre), which can be used to similar effect.

use 5.010; # need (?|pattern) "branch reset" regex construct use strict; use warnings; my $result = <<'EOT'; transaction 1234567; promote; 2014/08/01 10:22:37 ; user: john # Performing a "promote" on file. /./abc/desf/test.pl 138699/1 (138700/1) transaction 4578643; promote; 2014/08/01 10:22:37 ; user: sam /./abc/desf/test.pl 138699/1 (138700/1) EOT print qq{[[$result]] \n\n}; while ($result =~ m{ transaction \s (\d+) .*? user: \s* (\S+) \s* (?| [#] \s* ([^\n]*) | ()) # comment or empty string to $3 }xmsg) { my ($transaction, $user, $comment) = ($1, $2, $3); printf "%-12s %-10s %s\n", $transaction, $user, $comment; }

Output:

c:\@Work\Perl\monks\sravs448>perl alt_branch_reset_1.pl [[transaction 1234567; promote; 2014/08/01 10:22:37 ; user: john # Performing a "promote" on file. /./abc/desf/test.pl 138699/1 (138700/1) transaction 4578643; promote; 2014/08/01 10:22:37 ; user: sam /./abc/desf/test.pl 138699/1 (138700/1) ]] 1234567 john Performing a "promote" on file. 4578643 sam


In reply to Re^2: Reg the split expression by AnomalousMonk
in thread Reg the split expression by sravs448

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