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Home/ Questions/Q 8997749
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 15, 20262026-06-15T23:55:52+00:00 2026-06-15T23:55:52+00:00

I have a Perl script that takes in arguments. When I had single value

  • 0

I have a Perl script that takes in arguments. When I had single value arguments, the following code sufficed:

                    switch ($ARGV[0]) {

                    case "--cmd1" {
                            $action = "cmd1";
                    }


                    case "--cmd2" {
                            $action = "cmd2";
                    }

Now, I have a case where the command, cmd3 has a parameter, as in --cmd3=SOMETHING. Since SOMETHING can vary, the simple switch/case does not work anymore. Basically, I need to do a switch/case on the command itself. I thought I could use a regex with the first matching group being the command and the second being the optional equals. The following does not work, but it illustrates what I’m trying to do.

                    $ARGV[0] =~ m/(.*?)(=.*){0,1}/;
                    my $cmd = $1;
                    my $equals = $2;

                    switch ($cmd) {

                    case "--cmd1" {
                            $action = "cmd1";
                    }

                    case "--cmd2" {
                            $action = "cmd2";
                    }

                    case "--cmd3" {
                            $action = "cmd3";
                            print $equals;
                    }

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::EDIT:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

I figured it out, but I’ll give the guy who answered upvotes and accept anyway. I could not use if because that means restructuring everything. Here’s the solution.

                   switch ($ARGV[0]) {

                    case "--cmd1" {
                            $action = "cmd1";
                    }

                    case "--cmd2" {
                            $action = "cmd2";
                    }

                    case m/--cmd3(=.*)?/ {
                            $ARGV[0] =~ m/--cmd3(=.*)?/;
                            $action = "cmd3";
                            print $1;
                    }
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-15T23:55:53+00:00Added an answer on June 15, 2026 at 11:55 pm

    How about something like this?

    my $cmd = "";
    my $equals = "";
    
    if($ARGV[0] =~ m/^\-\-cmd1$/){$cmd="cmd1"}
    if($ARGV[0] =~ m/^\-\-cmd2$/){$cmd="cmd2"}
    if($ARGV[0] =~ m/^\-\-cmd3=(.*)$/){$cmd="cmd3";$equals=$1}
    
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