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Home/ Questions/Q 234103
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T20:09:28+00:00 2026-05-11T20:09:28+00:00

First question from a long time user. I’m writing a Perl script that will

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First question from a long time user.

I’m writing a Perl script that will go through a number of HTML files, search them line-by-line for instances of “color:” or “background-color:” (the CSS tags) and print the entire line when it comes across one of these instances. This is fairly straightforward.

Now I’ll admit I’m still a beginning programmer, so this next part may be extremely obvious, but that’s why I came here :).

What I want it to do is when it finds an instance of “color:” or “background-color:” I want it to trace back and find the name of the element, and print that as well. For example:

If my document contained the following CSS:

.css_class {
    font-size: 18px;
    font-weight: bold;
    color: #FFEFA1;
        font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;
}

I would want the script to output something like:

css_class,#FFEFA1

Ideally it would output this as a text file.

I would greatly appreciate any advice that could be given to me regarding this!

Here is my script in full thus far:

$color = "color:";


open (FILE, "index.html");  
@document = `<FILE>`;  
close (FILE);  

foreach $line (@document){  
    if($line =~ /$color/){  
        print $line;  
    }  
}   
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-11T20:09:29+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 8:09 pm

    Since you asked for advice (and this isn’t a coding service) I’ll offer just that.

    Always use strictures and warnings:

    use strict;
    use warnings;
    

    Always check the return value of open calls:

    open(FILE, 'filename') or die "Can't read file 'filename' [$!]\n";
    

    Use the three-arg form of open and lexical filehandles instead of globs:

    open(my $fh, '<', 'filename') or die "Can't read file 'filename' [$!]\n";
    

    Don’t slurp when line-by-line processing will do:

    while (my $line = <$fh>) {
        # do something with $line
    }
    

    Use backreferences to retrieve data from regex matches:

    if ($line =~ /color *: *(#[0-9a-fA-F]{6})/) {
        # color value is in $1
    }
    

    Save the class name in a temporary variable so that you have it when you match a color:

    if ($line =~ /^.(\w+) *\{/) {
        $class = $1;
    }
    
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