my @folder = ('s,c%','c__pp_p','Monday_øå_Tuesday, Wednesday','Monday & Tuesday','Monday_Tuesday___Wednesday');
if ($folder =~ s/[^w_*-]/_/g ) {
$folder =~ s/_+/_/g;
print "$folder : Got %n" ;
}
Using above code i am not able to handle this “Monday_øå_Tuesday_Wednesday”
The output should be :
s_c c_pp_p Monday_øå_Tuesday_Wednesday Monday_Tuesday Monday_Tuesday_Wednesday
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Answer
You can use W to negate the w character class, but the problem you’ve got is that w doesn’t match your non-ascii letters.
So you need to do something like this instead:
#!/usr/bin/env perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use Data::Dumper;
my @folder = ('s,c%','c__pp_p','Monday_øå_Tuesday, Wednesday','Monday & Tuesday','Monday_Tuesday___Wednesday');
s/[^p{Alpha}]+/_/g for @folder;
print Dumper @folder;
Outputs:
$VAR1 = [
's_c_',
'c_pp_p',
'Monday_øå_Tuesday_Wednesday',
'Monday_Tuesday',
'Monday_Tuesday_Wednesday'
];
This uses a unicode property – these are documented in perldoc perluniprop – but the long and short of it is, p{Alpha} is the unicode alphanumeric set, so much like w but internationalised.
Although, it does have a trailing _ on the first line. From your description, that seems to be what you wanted. If not, then… it’s probably easier to:
s/_$// for @folder;
than make a more complicated pattern.