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Many built-in functions accept a regex pattern as an argument. Furthermore, any subroutine can accept a string yet treat it as a regex pattern. This could be done, for example, by passing the string to the match operator (m//). Because regex patterns are encoded as regular strings, it is tempting to assume that a string literal will be treated as if a regex that matched only that string literal were supplied. Unexpected function behavior can result if the string contains characters that have special meanings when the string is treated as a regex pattern. Therefore, do not pass strings that are not clearly regex patterns to a function that takes a regex.

Noncompliant Code Example

This code example appears to split a list of names.

my $data = 'Tom$Dick$Harry';
my @names = split( '$', $data);

But the first argument to split() is treated as a regex pattern. Because $ indicates the end of the string, no splitting occurs.

Compliant Solution

This compliant solution passes a regex pattern to split() as the first argument, properly specifying $ as a raw character. Consequently, @names is assigned the three names Tom, Dick, and Harry.

my $data = 'Tom$Dick$Harry';
my @names = split( m/\$/, $data);

Exceptions

STR31-EX0: A string literal may be passed to a function if it normally takes a regex pattern but provides special behavior for that string. For example, the perlfunc manpage [Wall 2011] says, regarding PATTERN, the first argument to split():

As a special case, specifying a PATTERN of space (' ') will split on white space just as "split" with no arguments does. Thus, "split(' ')" can be used to emulate awk's default behavior, whereas "split(/ /)" will give you as many initial null fields (empty string) as there are leading spaces.
 

Risk Assessment

Recommendation

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

STR31-PL

Low

Likely

Low

P9

L2

Automated Detection

Tool

Diagnostic

Perl::Critic

BuiltinFunctions::ProhibitStringySplit

Bibliography

 


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