The Binding Operator, =~

Matching against $_ is merely the default; the binding operator (=~) tells Perl to match the pattern on the right against the string on the left, instead of matching against $_.[196] For example:

    my $some_other = "I dream of betty rubble.";
    if ($some_other =~ /\brub/) {
      print "Aye, there's the rub.\n";
    }

The first time you see it, the binding operator looks like some kind of assignment operator, but it’s not. It is saying, “This pattern match that would attach to $_ by default—make it work with this string on the left instead.” If there’s no binding operator, the expression is using $_ by default.

In the (somewhat unusual) example below, $likes_perl is set to a Boolean value according to what the user typed at the prompt. This is a little on the quick-and-dirty side because the line of input itself is discarded. This code reads the line of input, tests that string against the pattern, and discards the line of input.[197] It doesn’t use or change $_ at all.

    print "Do you like Perl? ";
    my $likes_perl = (<STDIN> =~ /\byes\b/i);
    ...  # Time passes...
    if ($likes_perl) {
      print "You said earlier that you like Perl, so...\n";
      ...
    }

Because the binding operator has fairly high precedence, the parentheses around the pattern-test expression aren’t required, so the following line does the same thing as the one above—it stores the result of the test (and not the line of input) into the variable:

    my $likes_perl = <STDIN> =~ /\byes\b/i;

[196] The binding operator is used ...

Get Learning Perl, Fourth Edition now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.