note
Anonymous Monk
<p>My /eee foo is weak. I have absolutely no clue what a /eee switch does on a regex. Here's what I've worked the whole thing down to and I don't understand how it works its magic. I know that /eee is on the perl purity test, but I'm still clueless :|</p>
<table bgcolor="#000000">
<tr><td><font color="#000000">
<code>
$_ = " ILwHChJwulrZrjqBkNAsA1XV8FM1pbl1PRZA8wJM
8A8R1g8tm88XVNgNL11rWVPvJ1P181hNP1a881SR8QWM8qw
WAngt8ugnAK181v181KxSLdi18E18TJTMY1b8TJE8T8Z188
8DB8bEj81WRABvGZ1Y1V8fAna111AQATJnbL81C1HzuPyJQ
IaIWNLqSxsLwo^ reverse ILwHChJwulrZrjqBkNAsA1XV
8FM1pbl1PRZA8wJM8A8R1g8tm88XVNgNL11rWVPvJ1P181h
NP1a881SR8QWM8qwWAngt8ugnAK181v181KxSLdi18E18TJ
TMY1b8TJE8T8Z1888DB8bEj81WRABvGZ1Y1V8fAna111AQA
TJnbL81C1HzuPyJQIaIWNLqSxsLwr";
s/\n//g;
s/s/lcfirst/eee;
</code>
</font></td></tr>
</table>
338686
338925
17