Well, the general answer to your question is: regular expresion. Below is an example of your question/answer:
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use strict;
my @test_strings = ("One flew over the cuckoo's nest", "1 flew over th
+e cuckoo's nest");
foreach my $match_string (@test_strings) {
if ($match_string =~ /\d+/) {
print "My matching string is\: $match_string\n";
}
}
If you run this, it will print:
"My matching string is: 1 flew over the cuckoo's nest",
because the regular expression
/\d+/ matched the "1" in that string. Notice, that it completely ignored "One flew over the cuckoo's nest", because it did not match our regular expression.
\d means digit character, while "+" means one, or more.
For more on regexen, see
this,
or this, do a
Super Search on regular expressions, or, if on a *nix machine, type perldoc perlre.
HTH,
Steve
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