Reputation: 59
$args[0] is a reference to a string containing one or more times. I am shifting each time by a variable number of seconds, but then I need to find a way to store (replace) the changed times back into the original string. Any help is appreciated. Here is roughly what I am working with:
my $TIMEREGEX = qr/(\d{2}:\d{2}:\d{2}\.\d{3}|\d{2}:\d{2}:\d{2})/x;
if ( my @sTime = ${$args[0]} =~ /$TIMEREGEX/g )
{
warn "\ttime(s) found @sTime\n" if $main::opt{d};
for my $i ( 0..$#sTime )
{
$sTime[$i] =~ /(\d{2}):(\d{2}):(\d{2})(\.(\d{3}))?/;
my $epoch_time = ( $1 * 3600 ) + ( $2 * 60 ) + $3;
$epoch_time += $epoch_shift;
my @f;
$f[0] = $epoch_time % 86400 / 3600; # hours
$f[1] = $epoch_time % 3600 / 60; # minutes
$f[2] = $epoch_time % 60; # seconds
my $save = $sTime[$i];
$sTime[$i] = sprintf ( "%02d:%02d:%02d", $f[0], $f[1], $f[2] );
$sTime[$i] .= $4 if defined ( $4 );
warn "\tTimeShift $save => $sTime[$i]\n" if $main::opt{d};
### some other stuff
}
# ${$args[0]} = "$1$t[0]$4$t[1]$7$t[2]$10";
### save the changes to ${$args[0]} !
}
Upvotes: 0
Views: 173
Reputation: 39158
Use the substitution operator.
use 5.010; # or better for 'say' and '//'
use strictures;
use Time::Piece qw();
my @args; my $epoch_shift = 500;
${$args[0]} = 'foo18:00:00.123bar18:00:00baz18:00:00quux';
${$args[0]} =~
s{
(\d{2}:\d{2}:\d{2}) # capture hh:mm:ss
(\.\d{3})? # optionally capture
# decimal dot and milliseconds
}
{
(
$epoch_shift
+ Time::Piece->strptime($1, '%T')
)->strftime('%T').($2 // '')
}egx;
say ${$args[0]};
# foo18:08:20.123bar18:08:20baz18:08:20quux
Upvotes: 2