Here is one way using a negated character class:
#!/usr/bin/perl -wl
use strict;
my $str = '{fred and barney} {bam bam} {pebbles} {} { }';
print $str;
$str =~ s|({[^}]+})|(my $tmp = $1) =~ s/ /_/g; $tmp|eg;
print $str;
__END__
Prints:
{fred and barney} {bam bam} {pebbles} {} { }
{fred_and_barney} {bam_bam} {pebbles} {} {___}
To substitute a variable you could modify the above as follows:
my $str2 = '{fred and barney} {bam bam} {pebbles} {} { }';
print $str2;
my $var = "xxxxx";
$str2 =~ s|({[^}]+})|{$var}|g;
print $str2;
__END__
Prints:
{fred and barney} {bam bam} {pebbles} {} { }
{xxxxx} {xxxxx} {xxxxx} {} {xxxxx}
If you have to deal with nested braces you should have a look at the Text::Balanced module.
--
John.
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