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author | Herbert Breunung <lichtkind@cpan.org> | 2016-01-28 18:07:23 -0500 |
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committer | Ricardo Signes <rjbs@cpan.org> | 2016-01-28 18:07:23 -0500 |
commit | 22bf43da45bc1d2f00bc2e20735f337af8b9d70e (patch) | |
tree | 464e2c3a8e3f0101e9dee9576fc4cf22d69381f5 /pod | |
parent | 3336af0b7f1cd5e0df6884e7476c9355943c4e6b (diff) | |
download | perl-22bf43da45bc1d2f00bc2e20735f337af8b9d70e.tar.gz |
perlretut: typo correction
Diffstat (limited to 'pod')
-rw-r--r-- | pod/perlretut.pod | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/pod/perlretut.pod b/pod/perlretut.pod index 9a3c696e0f..516d86913c 100644 --- a/pod/perlretut.pod +++ b/pod/perlretut.pod @@ -2241,7 +2241,7 @@ a little background. In Perl regular expressions, most regexp elements 'eat up' a certain amount of string when they match. For instance, the regexp element -C<[abc}]> eats up one character of the string when it matches, in the +C<[abc]> eats up one character of the string when it matches, in the sense that Perl moves to the next character position in the string after the match. There are some elements, however, that don't eat up characters (advance the character position) if they match. The examples |