From f06c83cee77b22e1bfd7435e3d7fd231b48663ee Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Tom Browder Date: Tue, 13 Aug 2019 11:44:25 -0500 Subject: [PATCH] make example classier --- doc/Language/regexes.pod6 | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/Language/regexes.pod6 b/doc/Language/regexes.pod6 index 50c39a5e9..c4a66b4de 100644 --- a/doc/Language/regexes.pod6 +++ b/doc/Language/regexes.pod6 @@ -1751,7 +1751,7 @@ the target regex to assume the form C. As described above, the evaluation of this regex will then trigger further interpolation of C<$variable2>: - my $string = Q[Mindfuck \w+ $variable1 $variable2]; + my $string = Q[Mindless \w+ $variable1 $variable2]; my $variable1 = Q[\w+]; my $variable2 = Q[$variable1]; my sub f1 { return Q[$variable2] }; @@ -1763,7 +1763,7 @@ C<$variable2>: say $string.match: /<$variable2>/; # OUTPUT: 「\w+」 # /<$variable1>/ ==> /\w+/ - say $string.match: /<$variable1>/; # OUTPUT: 「Mindfuck」 + say $string.match: /<$variable1>/; # OUTPUT: 「Mindless」 When an array variable is interpolated into a regex, the regex engine handles it like a C<|> alternative of the regex elements (see the documentation on