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How can I substitute the nth occurrence of a match in a Perl regex?

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2022-12-25 20:35 出处:网络
Following up from an earlier question on extracting the n\'th regex match, I now need to substitute the match, if found.

Following up from an earlier question on extracting the n'th regex match, I now need to substitute the match, if found.

I thought that I could define the extraction subroutine and call it in the substitution with the /e modifier. I was obviously wrong (admittedly, I had an XY problem).

use strict;
use warnings;

sub extract_quoted { # à la codaddict

        my ($string, $index) = @_;
        while($string =~ /'(.*?)'/g) {
                $index--;
                return $1 开发者_StackOverflow社区if(! $index);
        }
        return;
}

my $string = "'How can I','use' 'PERL','to process this' 'line'";

extract_quoted ( $string, 3 );
$string =~ s/&extract_quoted($string,2)/'Perl'/e;

print $string; # Prints 'How can I','use' 'PERL','to process this' 'line'

There are, of course, many other issues with this technique:

  • What if there are identical matches at different positions?
  • What if the match isn't found?

In light of this situation, I'm wondering in what ways this could be implemented.


EDIT: leonbloy came up with this solution first. If your tempted to upvote it, upvote leonbloy's first.

Somewhat inspired by leonbloy's (earlier) answer:

$line = "'How can I','use' 'PERL' 'to process this';'line'";
$n = 3;
$replacement = "Perl";

print "Old line: $line\n";
$z = 0;
$line =~ s/'(.*?)'/++$z==$n ? "'$replacement'" : "'$1'"/ge;
print "New line: $line\n";

Old line: 'How can I','use' 'PERL' 'to process this';'line'
New line: 'How can I','use' 'Perl' 'to process this';'line'


Or you can do something as this

use strict;
use warnings;

my $string = "'How can I','use' .... 'perl','to process this' 'line'";

my $cont =0;
sub replacen { # auxiliar function: replaces string if incremented counter equals $index
        my ($index,$original,$replacement) = @_;
        $cont++;
        return $cont == $index ? $replacement: $original;
}

#replace the $index n'th match (1-based counting) from $string by $rep
sub replace_quoted {
        my ($string, $index,$replacement) = @_;
        $cont = 0; # initialize match counter
        $string =~ s/'(.*?)'/replacen($index,$1,$replacement)/eg;
        return $string;
}

my $result = replace_quoted ( $string, 3 ,"PERL");
print "RESULT: $result\n";

A little ugly the "global" $cont variable, that could be polished, but you get the idea.

Update: a more compact version:

use strict;
my $string = "'How can I','use' .... 'perl','to process this' 'line'";

#replace the $index n'th match (1-based counting) from $string by $replacement
sub replace_quoted {
        my ($string, $index,$replacement) = @_;
        my $cont = 0; # initialize match counter
        $string =~ s/'(.*?)'/$cont++ == $index ? $replacement : $1/eg;
        return $string;
}

my $result = replace_quoted ( $string, 3 ,"PERL");
print "RESULT: $result\n";


If the regex isn't too much more complicated than what you have, you could follow a split with an edit and a join:

$line = "'How can I','use' 'PERL','to process this' 'line'";

$n = 3;
$new_text = "'Perl'";
@f = split /('.*?')/, $line;
# odd fields of @f contain regex matches
# even fields contain the text between matches
$f[2*$n-1] = $new_text;
$new_line = join '', @f;


See perldoc perlvar:

use strict; use warnings;

use Test::More tests => 5;

my %src = (
    q{'I want to' 'extract the word' 'PERL','from this string'}
    => q{'I want to' 'extract the word' 'Perl','from this string'},
    q{'What about', 'getting','PERL','from','here','?'}
    => q{'What about', 'getting','Perl','from','here','?'},
    q{'How can I','use' 'PERL','to process this' 'line'}
    => q{'How can I','use' 'Perl','to process this' 'line'},
    q{Invalid} => q{Invalid},
    q{'Another invalid string'} => q{'Another invalid string'}
);

while ( my ($src, $target) = each %src ) {
    ok($target eq subst_n($src, 3, 'Perl'), $src)
}

sub subst_n {
    my ($src, $index, $replacement) = @_;
    return $src unless $index > 0;
    while ( $src =~ /'.*?'/g ) {
        -- $index or return join(q{'},
            substr($src, 0, $-[0]),
            $replacement,
            substr($src, $+[0])
        );
    }
    return $src;
}

Output:

C:\Temp> pw
1..5
ok 1 - 'Another invalid string'
ok 2 - 'How can I','use' 'PERL','to process this' 'line'
ok 3 - Invalid
ok 4 - 'What about', 'getting','PERL','from','here','?'
ok 5 - 'I want to' 'extract the word' 'PERL','from this string'

Of course, you need to decide what happens if an invalid $index is passed or if the required match is not found. I just return the original string in the code above.


Reworking an answer to an earlier question, match n-1 times and then replace the next. Memoizing patterns spares poor Perl having to recompile the same patterns over and over.

my $_quoted = qr/'[^']+'/; # ' fix Stack Overflow highlighting
my %_cache;
sub replace_nth_quoted { 
  my($string,$index,$replace) = @_;
  my $pat = $_cache{$index} ||=
    qr/ ^
        (                    # $1
          (?:.*?$_quoted.*?) # match quoted substrings...
            {@{[$index-1]}}  # $index-1 times
        )
        $_quoted             # the ${index}th match
      /x;

  $string =~ s/$pat/$1$replace/;
  $string;
}

For example

my $string = "'How can I','use' 'PERL','to process this' 'line'";
print replace_nth_quoted($string, 3, "'Perl'"), "\n";

outputs

'How can I','use' 'Perl','to process this' 'line'
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