You're tired of constantly using two separate statements with redundant information, one to copy and another to substitute.
Sometimes what you wish you could have is the new string, but you don't care to write it in two steps.
For example:
# strip to basename ($progname = $0) =~ s!^.*/!!; # Make All Words Title-Cased ($capword = $word) =~ s/(\w+)/\u\L$1/g; # /usr/man/man3/foo.1 changes to /usr/man/cat3/foo.1 ($catpage = $manpage) =~ s/man(?=\d)/cat/;
You can even use this technique on an entire array:
@bindirs = qw( /usr/bin /bin /usr/local/bin ); for (@libdirs = @bindirs) { s/bin/lib/ } print "@libdirs\n";
/usr/lib /lib /usr/local/lib
The parentheses are required when combining an assignment if you wish to change the result in the leftmost variable. Normally, the result of a substitution is its success: either
""
for failure, or the number of times the substitution was done. Contrast this with the preceding examples where the parentheses surround the assignment itself. For example:
($a = $b) =~ s/x/y/g; # copy $b and then change $a $a = ($b =~ s/x/y/g); # change $b, count goes in $a
The "Variables" section of Chapter 2 of Programming Perl , and the "Assignment Operators" section of perlop (1)
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