Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: sed question
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting sed question Post 302101483 by tayyabq8 on Tuesday 2nd of January 2007 04:41:36 AM
Old 01-02-2007
Sed's replacement mechanism works as follows:

's/regular expression/replacement/flags'

In your case, 's/[^[:digit:]\(\)- ]//g' here [^[:digit:]\(\)- ] is a regular expression and // is replacement and g is global flag. Above regular expression tells sed to match characters which are not digits, (, ), -, space and replace them with null string globally. So this sed statement will match all characters which are not digit, (, ), -, space and remove them.

Regards,
Tayyab
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Sed Question

Hi, Is there any way to traverse the file once and look for the following conditions in one sweep instead of going over the file 3 times with different search criteria...... sed -n '/^ORA-07445/ p' /tmp/t$$ > ${OERRFILE} sed -n '/^ORA-00600/ p' /tmp/t$$ >> ${OERRFILE} ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: YS2002
1 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

sed question (again)

hello there, I have a sed question. I have a file (temp.srv), in it it has v1_host1 v2_host2 And I have another file (temp2.srv), in it is has v1_host3_date v1_host1 v2_host2 v2_host4_date v3_host5_date I had used a script to remove the name from temp2.srv base on the name inside... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ahtat99
3 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

sed question

Hi, When deleting lines using sed, as i understand the lines are redirected to the standard output. What i'm unclear about is how to actually modify the file? If I write the command sed '1,2d' test it will display lines one and 2 onto the screen however the file is not modified? I think my... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: c19h28O2
5 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

sed question

I have a file that conatins following info Policy1=U|guestRoom=test1idCode=5(1):!:Amenity2=U|RoomId=testrma=4(1):!:| GuestRoomAmenity1=U|guestRoomId=testguest1id^rmaCode=5(1):!:| I need it to look like this Policy1=U|guestRoom=test1idCode Amenity2=U|RoomId=testrmaCode... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: arushunter
2 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

sed question

How would I use sed to print everything on the line after the regular expresion? I have a configuration file setting several variables. cfg.dat DDB = cpptest SUDBNAME = sucpptestdb host = cpptest Example I want to search for the regular expresion 'SUDBNAME =' and print everything on... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: orahi001
3 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Sed Question 1. (Don't quite know how to use sed! Thanks)

Write a sed script to extract the year, rank, and stock for the most recent 10 years available in the file top10_mktval.csv, and output in the following format: ------------------------------ YEAR |RANK| STOCK ------------------------------ 2007 | 1 | Exxon... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: beibeiatNY
1 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

sed question

hi i have a file with this line: variable=/export/home/oracle I want to change the file so that the path is replaced with the value of another variable var2=/tmp/anything. how to do this in sed? thx (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: melanie_pfefer
4 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Sed question

I need to replace the numbers with a new string. How can I give a wildcard for the different # of numbers sed '/abcdef/s/abcdef=*/abcdef=999999/'<foo>foo1 From: To: abcdef=1234 abcdef=999999 abcdef=12345 abcdef=999999 abcdef=123456... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: beppler
10 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

SED question

I am trying to write a script that will take an input text file in the format person: place: phonenumber; person: place: phonenumber; person: place: phonenumber; ... and output it using sed too: Name ######## Location ######### Phone Number... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jmack56
1 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

SED question

I have the following string: "File Reader" I also have a list of directories: "File Reader (#53)" "CSV Writer (#47)" "Scorer (#22)" I want to search the name of each directory until I find "File Reader". Then, I want the corresponding number to be returned. For example, if I am... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: xan.amini
7 Replies
regexpr(3GEN)					     String Pattern-Matching Library Functions					     regexpr(3GEN)

NAME
regexpr, compile, step, advance - regular expression compile and match routines SYNOPSIS
cc [flag]... [file]... -lgen [library]... #include <regexpr.h> char *compile(char *instring, char *expbuf, const char *endbuf); int step(const char *string, const char *expbuf); int advance(const char *string, const char *expbuf); extern char *loc1, loc2, locs; extern int nbra, regerrno, reglength; extern char *braslist[], *braelist[]; DESCRIPTION
These routines are used to compile regular expressions and match the compiled expressions against lines. The regular expressions compiled are in the form used by ed(1). The parameter instring is a null-terminated string representing the regular expression. The parameter expbuf points to the place where the compiled regular expression is to be placed. If expbuf is NULL, compile() uses mal- loc(3C) to allocate the space for the compiled regular expression. If an error occurs, this space is freed. It is the user's responsibil- ity to free unneeded space after the compiled regular expression is no longer needed. The parameter endbuf is one more than the highest address where the compiled regular expression may be placed. This argument is ignored if expbuf is NULL. If the compiled expression cannot fit in (endbuf-expbuf) bytes, compile() returns NULL and regerrno (see below) is set to 50. The parameter string is a pointer to a string of characters to be checked for a match. This string should be null-terminated. The parameter expbuf is the compiled regular expression obtained by a call of the function compile(). The function step() returns non-zero if the given string matches the regular expression, and zero if the expressions do not match. If there is a match, two external character pointers are set as a side effect to the call to step(). The variables set in step() are loc1 and loc2. loc1 is a pointer to the first character that matched the regular expression. The variable loc2 points to the character after the last character that matches the regular expression. Thus if the regular expression matches the entire line, loc1 points to the first char- acter of string and loc2 points to the null at the end of string. The purpose of step() is to step through the string argument until a match is found or until the end of string is reached. If the regular expression begins with ^, step() tries to match the regular expression at the beginning of the string only. The advance() function is similar to step(); but, it only sets the variable loc2 and always restricts matches to the beginning of the string. If one is looking for successive matches in the same string of characters, locs should be set equal to loc2, and step() should be called with string equal to loc2. locs is used by commands like ed and sed so that global substitutions like s/y*//g do not loop forever, and is NULL by default. The external variable nbra is used to determine the number of subexpressions in the compiled regular expression. braslist and braelist are arrays of character pointers that point to the start and end of the nbra subexpressions in the matched string. For example, after calling step() or advance() with string sabcdefg and regular expression (abcdef), braslist[0] will point at a and braelist[0] will point at g. These arrays are used by commands like ed and sed for substitute replacement patterns that contain the notation for subexpressions. Note that it is not necessary to use the external variables regerrno, nbra, loc1, loc2 locs, braelist, and braslist if one is only checking whether or not a string matches a regular expression. EXAMPLES
Example 1 The following is similar to the regular expression code from grep: #include<regexpr.h> . . . if(compile(*argv, (char *)0, (char *)0) == (char *)0) regerr(regerrno); . . . if (step(linebuf, expbuf)) succeed(); RETURN VALUES
If compile() succeeds, it returns a non-NULL pointer whose value depends on expbuf. If expbuf is non-NULL, compile() returns a pointer to the byte after the last byte in the compiled regular expression. The length of the compiled regular expression is stored in reglength. Otherwise, compile() returns a pointer to the space allocated by malloc(3C). The functions step() and advance() return non-zero if the given string matches the regular expression, and zero if the expressions do not match. ERRORS
If an error is detected when compiling the regular expression, a NULL pointer is returned from compile() and regerrno is set to one of the non-zero error numbers indicated below: ERROR MEANING 11 Range endpoint too large. 16 Bad Number. 25 "digit" out or range. 36 Illegal or missing delimiter. 41 No remembered string search. 42 (~) imbalance. 43 Too many (. 44 More than 2 numbers given in [~}. 45 } expected after . 46 First number exceeds second in {~}. 49 [] imbalance. 50 Regular expression overflow. ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |MT-Level |MT-Safe | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
ed(1), grep(1), sed(1), malloc(3C), attributes(5), regexp(5) NOTES
When compiling multi-threaded applications, the _REENTRANT flag must be defined on the compile line. This flag should only be used in multi-threaded applications. SunOS 5.11 29 Dec 1996 regexpr(3GEN)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:33 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy