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Previous: 1.16. Soundex Matching Chapter 1
Strings
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1.17. Program: fixstyle

Imagine you have a table with both old and new strings, such as the following.

Old Words

New Words

bonnet

hood

rubber

eraser

lorry

truck

trousers

pants

The program in Example 1.4 is a filter that changes all occurrences of each element in the first set to the corresponding element in the second set.

When called without filename arguments, the program is a simple filter. If filenames are supplied on the command line, an in-place edit writes the changes to the files, with the original versions safely saved in a file with a " .orig " extension. See Recipe 7.9 for a description. A -v command-line option writes notification of each change to standard error.

The table of original strings and their replacements is stored below __END__ in the main program as described in Recipe 7.6 . Each pair of strings is converted into carefully escaped substitutions and accumulated into the $code variable like the popgrep2 program in Recipe 6.10 .

A -t check to test for an interactive run check tells whether we're expecting to read from the keyboard if no arguments are supplied. That way if the user forgets to give an argument, they aren't wondering why the program appears to be hung.

Example 1.4: fixstyle

#!/usr/bin/perl -w # fixstyle - switch first set of <DATA> strings to second set #   usage: $0 [-v] [files ...] use strict; my $verbose = (@ARGV && $ARGV[0] eq '-v' && shift);  if (@ARGV) {     $^I = ".orig";          # preserve old files } else {     warn "$0: Reading from stdin\n" if -t STDIN; }  my $code = "while (<>) {\n"; # read in config, build up code to eval while (<DATA>) {     chomp;     my ($in, $out) = split /\s*=>\s*/;     next unless $in && $out;     $code .= "s{\\Q$in\\E}{$out}g";     $code .= "&& printf STDERR qq($in => $out at \$ARGV line \$.\\n)"                                                          if $verbose;     $code .= ";\n"; } $code .= "print;\n}\n";  eval "{ $code } 1" || die;  __END__ analysed        => analyzed built-in        => builtin chastized       => chastised commandline     => command-line de-allocate     => deallocate dropin          => drop-in hardcode        => hard-code meta-data       => metadata multicharacter  => multi-character multiway        => multi-way non-empty       => nonempty non-profit      => nonprofit non-trappable   => nontrappable pre-define      => predefine preextend       => pre-extend re-compiling    => recompiling reenter         => re-enter turnkey         => turn-key

One caution: This program is fast, but it doesn't scale if you need to make hundreds of changes. The larger the DATA section, the longer it takes. A few dozen changes won't slow it down, and in fact, the version given in the solution above is faster for that case. But if you run the program on hundreds of changes, it will bog down.

Example 1.5 is a version that's slower for few changes but faster when there are many changes.

Example 1.5: fixstyle2

#!/usr/bin/perl -w # 

fixstyle2 - like fixstyle but faster for many many matches use strict; my $verbose = (@ARGV && $ARGV[0] eq '-v' && shift); my %change = (); while (<DATA>) {      chomp;     my ($in, $out) = split /\s*=>\s*/;     next unless $in && $out;     $change{$in} = $out; }  if (@ARGV) {      $^I = ".orig"; } else {      warn "$0: Reading from stdin\n" if -t STDIN; }  while (<>) {      my $i = 0;     s/^(\s+)// && print $1;         # emit leading whitespace     for (split /(\s+)/, $_, -1) {   # preserve trailing whitespace         print( ($i++ & 1) ? $_ : ($change{$_} || $_));     }  }  __END__ analysed        => analyzed built-in        => builtin chastized       => chastised commandline     => command-line de-allocate     => deallocate dropin          => drop-in hardcode        => hard-code meta-data       => metadata multicharacter  => multi-character multiway        => multi-way non-empty       => nonempty non-profit      => nonprofit non-trappable   => nontrappable pre-define      => predefine preextend       => pre-extend re-compiling    => recompiling reenter         => re-enter turnkey         => turn-key

This version breaks each line into chunks of whitespace and words, which isn't a fast operation. It then uses those words to look up their replacements in a hash, which is much faster than a substitution. So the first part is slower, the second faster. The difference in speed depends on the number of matches.

If we didn't care about keeping the amount of whitespace separating each word constant, the second version can run as fast as the first even for a few changes. If you know a lot about your input, you can collapse whitespace into single blanks by plugging in this loop:

# very fast, but whitespace collapse while (<>) {      for (split) {          print $change{$_} || $_, " ";     }      print "\n"; }

That leaves an extra blank at the end of each line. If that's a problem, you could use the technique from Recipe 16.14 to install an output filter. Place the following code in front of the while loop that's collapsing whitespace:

my $pid = open(STDOUT, "|-"); die "cannot fork: $!" unless defined $pid; unless ($pid) {             # child         while (<STDIN>) {         s/ $//;         print;     }      exit; } 






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