I am trying to get rid of some ending tags but I run into some problems.
Ex.
How are you?</EndTag><Begin>It is fine.</Begin><New> Just about
I am trying to get rid of the ending tags, starts with </ and ending with >. (which is </EndTag> and </Begin>)
I tried the following
sed... (2 Replies)
Hi,
Is there any way of using grep (this may be done in awk, not sure?) that I can stop grep'n a file once I have found the first occurrence of my search string. Looking through grep man pages
-q will exit without printing the lines after the first match, but I need the output.
I have... (5 Replies)
Hi All,
is there a way to extract the line number of an occurrence using grep?
I know that with the -n option it prints out the line number as well.
I would like to assign the line number to a variable.
Thanks,
Sarah (5 Replies)
I have 1300 files (SearchFiles0001.txt, SearchFiles0002.txt, etc.) , each with 650,000 lines, tab-delimited data.
I have a pattern file, with about 1000 lines with a single word. Each single word is found in the 1300 files once.
If I grep -f PatternFile.txt SearchFiles*.txt >OutputFile.txt... (2 Replies)
hey , i m trying to figure out how to do the following :
i got a text file the looks like so:
1031
1031
1031
1031
1031
1031
1031
1031
16500
16500
16500
16500
1031
1031 (4 Replies)
I'm using sed to switch integers (one or more digits) to the other side of the ':' colon. For example: "47593:23421" would then be "23421:47593". The way it functions right now, it is messing my settings file to use with gnuplot. The current command is:
sed 's/\(*\):\(*\)/\2:\1/' out3 >... (3 Replies)
I have the following script:
sed '/string1/,/string2/!d' infile
I want to apply the script to the first occurrence only. I have tried
sed '0,/string1/,/string2/!d' infile
Of course, that does not work
Any help will be greatly appreciated (12 Replies)
Hi, i have file file.txt with data like:
START
03:11:30 a
03:11:40 b
END
START
03:13:30 eee
03:13:35 fff
END
jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj
START
03:14:30 eee
03:15:30 fff
END
ggggggggggg
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
I want the below output
START (13 Replies)
I have file contents
/tmp/x/abc.txt
/home/bin/backup/sys/a.log
I need this output:
/tmp/x/
/home/bin/backup/sys/
Can somebody please help me out
Please use CODE tags as required by forum rules! (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: jhonnyrip
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MINIX
grep
GREP(1) General Commands Manual GREP(1)NAME
grep - search a file for lines containing a given pattern
SYNOPSIS
grep [-elnsv] pattern [file] ...
OPTIONS -e-e pattern is the same as pattern
-c Print a count of lines matched
-i Ignore case
-l Print file names, no lines
-n Print line numbers
-s Status only, no printed output
-v Select lines that do not match
EXAMPLES
grep mouse file # Find lines in file containing mouse
grep [0-9] file # Print lines containing a digit
DESCRIPTION
Grep searches one or more files (by default, stdin) and selects out all the lines that match the pattern. All the regular expressions
accepted by ed and mined are allowed. In addition, + can be used instead of * to mean 1 or more occurrences, ? can be used to mean 0 or 1
occurrences, and | can be used between two regular expressions to mean either one of them. Parentheses can be used for grouping. If a
match is found, exit status 0 is returned. If no match is found, exit status 1 is returned. If an error is detected, exit status 2 is
returned.
SEE ALSO cgrep(1), fgrep(1), sed(1), awk(9).
GREP(1)