The flip-flop operator in Perl evaluates to true when the left operand is true, and keeps evaluating to true until the right operand is true. The left and right operand could be any kind of expression, but most often it is used with regexes.
With regexes, it is useful for finding all the lines between two markers. Here is a simple example that shows how it works:
use Modern::Perl;
while (<DATA>)
{
if (/start/ .. /end/)
{
say "flip flop true: $_";
}
else
{
say "flip flop false: $_";
}
}
__DATA__
foo
bar
start
inside
blah
this is the end
baz
The flip flop operator will be true for all lines from start
until this is the end
.
The two dot version of the operator allows first and second regex to both match on the same line. So, if your data looked like this, the above program would only be true for the line start blah end
:
foo
bar
start blah end
inside
blah
this is the end
baz
If you don't want the first and second regexes to match the same line, you can use the three dot version: if (/start/ ... /end/)
.
Note that care should be taken not to confuse the flip-flop operator with the range operator. In list context, ..
has an entirely different function: it returns a list of sequential values. e.g.
my @integers = 1 .. 1000; #makes an array of integers from 1 to 1000.
I'm not familiar with Ruby, but Lee Jarvis's link suggests that it works similarly.
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