6

Is it possible to use junction to match any of the values in a junction? I want to match any of the values in an array. What is the proper way to do it?

lisprog$ perl6
To exit type 'exit' or '^D'
> my @a=<a b c>
[a b c]
> any(@a)
any(a, b, c)
> my $x=any(@a)
any(a, b, c)
> my $y = "a 1"
a 1
> say $y ~~ m/ $x /
False
> say $y ~~ m/ "$x" /
False
> my $x = any(@a).Str
any("a", "b", "c")
> say $y ~~ m/ $x /
False
> say $y ~~ m/ || $x /
False
> say $y ~~ m/ || @a /
「a」
> 

Thanks !!

lisprogtor
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1 Answers1

9

Junctions are not meant to be interpolated into regexes. They're meant to be used in normal Perl 6 expressions, particularly with comparison operators (such as eq):

my @a = <x y z>;
say    "y" eq any(@a);  # any(False, True, False)
say so "y" eq any(@a);  # True

To match any of the values of an array in a regex, simply write the name of the array variable (starting with @) in the regex. By default, this is interpreted as an | alternation ("longest match"), but you can also specify it to be a || alternation ("first match"):

my @a = <foo bar barkeep>;
say "barkeeper" ~~ / @a /;     # 「barkeep」
say "barkeeper" ~~ / || @a /;  # 「bar」
smls
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  • Thank you again smls !! I Think Perl6 is really cool; I get things done faster with perl6 than with racket. – lisprogtor Jan 06 '17 at 07:30