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Home/ Questions/Q 8505851
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 11, 20262026-06-11T02:26:08+00:00 2026-06-11T02:26:08+00:00

I am looking at Perl script written by someone else, and I found this:

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I am looking at Perl script written by someone else, and I found this:

$num2 = '000000';
substr($num2, length($num2)-length($num), length($num)) = $num;
my $id_string = $text."_".$num2

Forgive me ignorance, but for an untrained Perl programmer the second line looks as if the author is assigning the string $num to the result of the function substr. What does this line exactly do?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-11T02:26:09+00:00Added an answer on June 11, 2026 at 2:26 am

    In Perl, (unlike say, Python, where strings, tuples are not modifiable in-place), strings can be modified in situ. That is what substr is doing here, it is modifying only a part of the string. Instead of this syntax, you can use the more cryptic syntax:

    substr($num2, length($num2)-length($num), length($num),$num);
    

    which accomplishes the same thing. You can further stretch it. Imagine you want to replace all instances of foo by bar in a string, but only within the first 50 characters. Perl will let you do it in a one-liner:

    substr($target,0,50) =~ s/foo/bar/g;
    

    Great, isn’t it?

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