Chapter 14. Strings and Sorting

As we mentioned near the beginning of this book, Perl is designed to be good at solving programming problems that are about 90% working with text and 10% everything else. So it’s no surprise that Perl has strong text-processing abilities, even without all that you’ve done with regular expressions. Sometimes the regular expression engine is too fancy and you need a simpler way of working with a string, as you’ll see in this chapter.

Finding a Substring with index

Finding a substring depends on where you lost it. If you happen to have lost it within a bigger string, you’re in luck because the index function can help you out. Here’s how it looks:

my $where = index($big, $small);

Perl locates the first occurrence of the small string within the big string, returning an integer location of the first character. The character position returned is a zero-based value: if the substring is found at the very beginning of the string, index returns 0; if it’s one character later, the return value is 1, and so on. If index can’t find the substring at all, it returns -1 to indicate that. In this example, $where gets 6 because that’s the position where wor starts:

my $stuff = "Howdy world!";
my $where = index($stuff, "wor");

Another way you could think of the position number is the number of characters to skip over before getting to the substring. Since $where is 6, you know that you have to skip over the first six characters of $stuff before you find wor.

The index function ...

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