> "CS" == Chris Santerre <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>
>> ... punctuation matches \b just fine.
CS> I didn't know that! (Or completely blew by that fact when
CS> reading.) But that makes sense. Thanks!
Actually, it doesn't match the punctuation. It matches the
/transition/ from word to no
>
> On Thu, 30 Oct 2003 10:24:19 -0500 Chris Santerre
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > /* era */ wrote:
> > >
> > > Yrg'f ubcr gurl qba'g qvfpbire Havpbqr nal gvzr fbba.
> >
> > Ook. ?huh? ^^
>
> perldoc Crypt::Rot13 :)
>
> -- Bob
>
LOL rot13.com
Let's hope they don't dis
On Thu, 30 Oct 2003 10:24:19 -0500 Chris Santerre <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> /* era */ wrote:
> >
> > Yrg'f ubcr gurl qba'g qvfpbire Havpbqr nal gvzr fbba.
>
> Ook. ?huh? ^^
perldoc Crypt::Rot13 :)
-- Bob
---
This SF.net em
>
> This requires there to be _a_ letter before "p" which isn't always
> what you want either.
Yup, Definetly not what I want.
>
> > Or I could easily just do this:
> > /\bpen.s/i
> > But I thought that spammers could use punctuation to get past that.
>
> Actually,
>
> $ perl -le 'print