Perl | Searching in a File using regex
Last Updated :
11 Jul, 2025
Prerequisite: Perl | Regular Expressions
Regular Expression (Regex or Regexp or RE) in
Perl is a special text string for describing a search pattern within a given text. Regex in Perl is linked to host language and are not the same as in PHP, Python, etc. Sometimes these are termed as "Perl 5 Compatible Regular Expressions". To use the Regex, Binding operators like
=~
(Regex Operator) and
!~
(Negated Regex Operator) are used.
These Binding regex operators are used to match a string from a regular expression. The left-hand side of the statement will contain a string which will be matched with the right-hand side which will contain the specified pattern. Negated regex operator checks if the string is not equal to the regular expression specified on the right-hand side.
Regex operators help in searching for a specific word or a group of words in a file. This can be done in multiple ways as per the user's requirement. Searching in Perl follows the standard format of first opening the file in the read mode and further reading the file line by line and then look for the required string or group of strings in each line. When the required match is found, then the statement following the search expression will determine what is the next step to do with the matched string, it can be either added to any other file specified by the user or simply printed on the console.
Within the regular expression created to match the required string with the file, there can be multiple ways to search for the required string:
Regular Search:
This is the basic pattern of writing a regular expression which looks for the required string within the specified file. Following is the syntax of such a Regular Expression:
$String =~ /the/
This expression will search for the lines in the file which contain a word with letters '
the' in it and store that word in the variable
$String
. Further, this variable's value can be copied to a file or simply printed on the console.
Example:
Perl
use strict;
use warnings;
sub main
{
my $file = 'C:\Users\GeeksForGeeks\GFG.txt';
open(FH, $file) or die("File $file not found");
while(my $String = <FH>)
{
if($String =~ /the/)
{
print "$String \n";
}
}
close(FH);
}
main();
Output:

As it can be seen that the above search also results in the selection of words which have 'the' as a part of it. To avoid such words the regular expression can be changed in the following manner:
$String =~ / the /
By providing spaces before and after the required word to be searched, the searched word is isolated from both the ends and no such word that contains it as a part of it is returned in the searching process. This will solve the problem of searching extra words which are not required. But, this will result in excluding the words that contain comma or full stop immediately after the requested search word.
To avoid such situation, there are other ways as well which help in limiting the search to a specific word, one of such ways is using the word boundary.
Using Word Boundary in Regex Search:
As seen in the above Example, regular search results in returning either the extra words which contain the searched word as a part of it or excluding some of the words if searched with spaces before and after the required word. To avoid such a situation, word boundary is used which is denoted by '
\b
'.
$String =~ /\bthe\b/;
This will limit the words which contain the requested word to be searched as a part of it and will not exclude the words that end with a comma or full stop.
Example:
Perl
use strict;
use warnings;
sub main
{
my $file = 'C:\Users\GeeksForGeeks\GFG.txt';
open(FH, $file) or die("File $file not found");
while(my $String = <FH>)
{
if($String =~ /\bthe\b/)
{
print "$String \n";
}
}
close(FH);
}
main();
Output:

As it can be seen in the above given example, the word which is ending with full stop is included in the search but the words which contain the searched words as a part are excluded. Hence, word boundary can help overcome the problem created in the Regular Search method.
What if there is a case in which there is a need to find words that either start or end or both with specific characters? Then that can't be done with the use of Regular Search or the word boundary. For cases like these, Perl allows the use of WildCards in the Regular Expression.
Use of Wild Cards in Regular Expression:
Perl allows to search for a specific set of words or the words that follow a specific pattern in the given file with the use of Wild cards in Regular Expression. Wild cards are 'dots' placed within the regex along with the required word to be searched. These wildcards allow the regex to search for all the related words that follow the given pattern and will display the same. Wild cards help in reducing the number of iterations involved in searching for various different words which have a pattern of letters in common.
$String =~ /t..s/;
Above pattern will search for all the words which start with t, end with s, and have two letters/characters between them.
Example:
Perl
use strict;
use warnings;
sub main
{
my $file = 'C:\Users\GeeksForGeeks\GFG.txt';
open(FH, $file) or die("File $file not found");
while(my $String = <FH>)
{
if($String =~ /t..s/)
{
print "$String \n";
}
}
close(FH);
}
main();
Output:

Above code contains all the words as specified in the given pattern.
In this method of printing the searched words, the whole line that contains that word gets printed which makes it difficult to find out exactly what word is searched by the user. To avoid this confusion, we can only print the searched words and not the whole sentence. This is done by grouping the searched pattern with the use of parentheses. To print this grouping of words,
$number
variables are used.
$number variables
are the matches from the last successful match of the capture groups that are formed in the regular expression. e.g. if there are multiple groupings in the regular expression then
$1
will print the words that match the first grouping, similarly,
$2
will match the second grouping and so on.
Given below is the above program transformed using the $number variables to show only the searched words and not the whole sentence:
Perl
use strict;
use warnings;
sub main
{
my $file = 'C:\Users\GeeksForGeeks\GFG.txt';
open(FH, $file) or die("File $file not found");
while(my $String = <FH>)
{
if($String =~ /(t..s)/)
{
print "$1 \n";
}
}
close(FH);
}
main();
Output:
Similar Reads
Basics
Perl Programming LanguagePerl is a general purpose, high level interpreted and dynamic programming language. Perl supports both the procedural and Object-Oriented programming. Perl is a lot similar to C syntactically and is easy for the users who have knowledge of C, C++. Since Perl is a lot similar to other widely used lan
3 min read
Introduction to PerlPerl is a general-purpose, high level interpreted and dynamic programming language. It was developed by Larry Wall, in 1987. There is no official Full form of the Perl, but still, the most used expansion is "Practical Extraction and Reporting Language". Some of the programmers also refer Perl as the
9 min read
Perl Installation and Environment Setup in Windows, Linux, and MacOSPrerequisite: Introduction to Perl Before, we start with the process of Installing Perl on our System, whether it be Windows, Linux or Macintosh. We must have first-hand knowledge of What the Perl Language is and what it actually does?. Perl is a general purpose, high level interpreted and dynamic p
3 min read
Perl | Basic Syntax of a Perl ProgramPerl is a general purpose, high level interpreted and dynamic programming language. Perl was originally developed for the text processing like extracting the required information from a specified text file and for converting the text file into a different form. Perl supports both the procedural and
10 min read
Hello World Program in PerlPerl programming language is exclusively designed for text processing purposes. Its abbreviation denotes Practical Extraction and Report Language. It is compatible on various platforms, such as Windows, Mac OS, and almost all versions of UNIX. Hello World! program in every programming language gives
3 min read
Fundamentals
Control Flow
Perl | Decision Making (if, if-else, Nestedâif, if-elsif ladder, unless, unless-else, unless-elsif)Decision Making in programming is similar to decision making in real life. In programming, a certain block of code needs to be executed when some condition is fulfilled. A programming language uses control statements to control the flow of execution of the program based on certain conditions. These
6 min read
Perl | Loops (for, foreach, while, do...while, until, Nested loops)Looping in programming languages is a feature which facilitates the execution of a set of instructions or functions repeatedly while some condition evaluates to true. Loops make the programmers task simpler. Perl provides the different types of loop to handle the condition based situation in the pro
7 min read
Perl | given-when Statementgiven-when statement in Perl is a substitute for long if-statements that compare a variable to several integral values. The given-when statement is a multiway branch statement. It provides an easy way to dispatch execution to different parts of code based on the value of the expression. given is a c
4 min read
Perl | goto statementThe goto statement in Perl is a jump statement which is sometimes also referred to as unconditional jump statement. The goto statement can be used to jump from anywhere to anywhere within a function. Syntax: LABEL: Statement 1; Statement 2; . . . . . Statement n; goto LABEL; In the above syntax, the
3 min read
Arrays & Lists
Perl | ArraysIn Perl, array is a special type of variable. The array is used to store the list of values and each object of the list is termed as an element. Elements can either be a number, string, or any type of scalar data including another variable. Example: @number = (50, 70, 46); @names = ("Geeks", "For",
6 min read
Perl | Array SlicesIn Perl, array is a special type of variable. The array is used to store the list of values and each object of the list is termed as an element. Elements can either be a number, string, or any type of scalar data including another variable. Arrays can store any type of data and that data can be acce
3 min read
Perl | Arrays (push, pop, shift, unshift)Perl provides various inbuilt functions to add and remove the elements in an array. .string-table { font-family: arial, sans-serif; border-collapse: collapse; border: 1px solid #5fb962; width: 100%; } .string-table td, th { background-color: #c6ebd9; border: 1px solid #5fb962; text-align: left; padd
3 min read
Perl List and its TypesIntroduction to Lists A list is a collection of scalar values. We can access the elements of a list using indexes. Index starts with 0 (0th index refers to the first element of the list). We use parenthesis and comma operators to construct a list. In Perl, scalar variables start with a $ symbol wher
4 min read
Hash
Scalars
Strings
Perl | Quoted, Interpolated and Escaped StringsA string in Perl is a scalar variable and start with a ($) sign and it can contain alphabets, numbers, special characters. The string can consist of a single word, a group of words or a multi-line paragraph. The String is defined by the user within a single quote (â) or double quote (â). Quoted Stri
4 min read
Perl | String OperatorsOperators are the foundation of any programming language. Thus, the functionality of Perl programming language is incomplete without the use of operators. A user can define operators as symbols that help to perform specific mathematical and logical computations on operands. String are scalar variabl
4 min read
Perl | String functions (length, lc, uc, index, rindex)String in Perl is a sequence of character enclosed within some kinds of quotation marks. Perl string can contain UNICODE, ASCII and escape sequence characters. Perl provides the various function to manipulate the string like any other programming language. Some string functions of Perl are as follow
4 min read
OOP Concepts
Object Oriented Programming (OOPs) in PerlObject-oriented programming: As the name suggests, Object-Oriented Programming or OOPs refers to languages that uses objects in programming. Object-oriented programming aims to implement real-world entities like inheritance, hiding, polymorphism, etc in programming. The main aim of OOP is to bind to
7 min read
Perl | Classes in OOPIn this modern world, where the use of programming has moved to its maximum and has its application in each and every work of our lives, we need to adapt ourselves to such programming paradigms that are directly linked to the real-world examples. There has been a drastic change in the competitivenes
6 min read
Perl | Objects in OOPsPerl is an Objected Oriented, dynamic and interpreter based programming language. In object-oriented programming, we have three main aspects, which are, object, class, and methods. An object is a data type which can be specifically called as an instance of the class to which it belongs. It can be a
6 min read
Perl | Methods in OOPsMethods are used to access and modify the data of an object. These are the entities which are invoked with the use of objects of a class or a package itself. Methods are basically a subroutine in Perl, there is no special identity of a method. Syntax of a method is the same as that of a subroutine.
5 min read
Perl | Constructors and DestructorsConstructors Constructors in Perl subroutines returns an object which is an instance of the class. In Perl, the convention is to name the constructor "new". Unlike many other OOPs, Perl does not provide any special syntax for constructing an object. It uses Data structures(hashes, arrays, scalars) t
4 min read
Perl | Method Overriding in OOPsIn any object-oriented programming language, Overriding is a feature that allows a subclass or child class to provide a specific implementation of a method that is already provided by one of its super-classes or parent classes. When a method in a subclass has the same name, same parameters or signat
6 min read
Perl | Inheritance in OOPsInheritance is a key concept in object-oriented programming that allows you to define a new class based on an existing class. The new class, called a subclass or derived class, inherits all of the properties and methods of the existing class, called the superclass or base class, and can also define
7 min read
Perl | Polymorphism in OOPsPolymorphism is the ability of any data to be processed in more than one form. The word itself indicates the meaning as poly means many and morphism means types. Polymorphism is one of the most important concepts of object-oriented programming languages. The most common use of polymorphism in object
4 min read
Perl | Encapsulation in OOPsEncapsulation in Perl is the process of wrapping up of data to protect it from the outside sources which need not have access to that part of the code. Encapsulation is a part of the Object-oriented programming, it is used to bind the data and the subroutines that are used to manipulate that data. I
6 min read
Regular Expressions
File Handling
Perl | File Handling IntroductionIn Perl, file handling is the process of creating, reading, writing, updating, and deleting files. Perl provides a variety of built-in functions and modules that make it easy to work with files. Here's an introduction to file handling in Perl: File modes:When opening a file in Perl, you need to spec
7 min read
Perl | Opening and Reading a FileA filehandle is an internal Perl structure that associates a physical file with a name. All filehandles have read/write access, so once filehandle is attached to a file reading/writing can be done. However, the mode in which file handle is opened is to be specified while associating a filehandle. Op
4 min read
Perl | Writing to a FileA filehandle is a variable that is used to read and write to a file. This filehandle gets associated with the file. In order to write to the file, it is opened in write mode as shown below: open (FH, â>â, âfilename.txtâ); If the file is existing then it truncates the old content of file with the
3 min read
Perl | Useful File-handling functionsPerl was originally developed for the text processing like extracting the required information from a specified text file and for converting the text file into a different form. These operations can be performed by the use of various inbuilt file functions. Example: Perl #!/usr/bin/perl # Opening a
2 min read