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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T01:28:50+00:00 2026-05-13T01:28:50+00:00

The y operator in Perl does character-by-character transliteration. For example, if we do y/abc/dfg

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The y operator in Perl does character-by-character transliteration. For example, if we do y/abc/dfg to the string “foobar”, we get “foofdr”. But what if I want to transliterate “ā” to “ei” and “ä” to “a:” and “ō” to “әu” and “o” to “ɒ”.

I tried the following line of code but no luck:(

y/āäōo/(ei)(a:)(әu)ɒ/

Do we hopefully have a workaround for this problem? Or do I have to repeatedly use the s operator and do a lot of cumbersome substitutions?

Thanks in advance for any guidance 🙂

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T01:28:50+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 1:28 am

    In this case, create a hash and go from the keys to the strings easily.

    use warnings;
    use strict;
    use utf8;
    binmode STDOUT, ":utf8";
    my $string = "āäōo";
    my %trans = qw/ā ei ä a: ō u o ɒ/;
    my $keys = join '', keys %trans;
    $string =~ s/([$keys])/$trans{$1}/g;
    print "$string\n";
    

    You need to alter this if your keys are more than one character long by sorting the keys in order of decreasing length and joining them using ( | | ) instead of [ ].

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