id,summary,reporter,owner,description,type,status,milestone,component,version,severity,resolution,keywords,cc 2556,Perl regex replacement,jcombe@…,John Maddock,"I have code that reads a lookup table from memory and then attempts to search for the word found in the lookup table in some data using a regular expression:- (.*\b)word(\b.*) Where this matches I call replace with the following $1WORD$2 This falls down when the word is ""2lt"" as I get the following to search for (.*\b)2lt(\b.*) With replacement $12LT$2 What happens is it sees $12 as the substring to replace and since I only have two pairs of brackets in my regular expression $12 does not exist and so in effect the 2 in my input data is lost. I am using Perl format regular expressions (boost::regex::perl) In Perl I can resolve this by making the replacement ${1}2LT${2} When I do this using boost I get the literal text as above output (including ${1} etc.) not the text that I expect. Since I've told Boost to use Perl syntax I would expect a regular expression replacement in Perl and Boost to behave the same way. Is this a bug ? Thanks Jon",Bugs,closed,Boost 1.38.0,regex,Boost 1.37.0,Problem,fixed,,