Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Regex
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Regex Post 302112423 by bigearsbilly on Wednesday 28th of March 2007 04:18:37 AM
Old 03-28-2007
how about this

do_something if m/[+]{5}/
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Need a regex

Hi, I am trying to grep for the following type of string from a document given below: 12637 1239 3356 12956 7004 7004 7004 13381 13381 *> 12.0.1.63 0 7018 21872 ? * 208.51.134.254 53 0 3549 7018 21872 ?... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Legend986
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

regex

Can anyone give the detailed explanation on regex search i want to know the use of regex in sed and awk also...... the operators like ^,.,* ....etc i need it with some example.....kindly help on this. I gone through the man pages also..but i was not clear......... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sivakumar.rj
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

regex help

I would like to search strings composed by only one type of charachter for example only strings composed by the charachter 'b' is it right? $egrep '\<(b+)+\>' filename Could be there some side effects? Regards. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: and77
1 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Converting perl regex to sed regex

I am having trouble parsing rpm filenames in a shell script.. I found a snippet of perl code that will perform the task but I really don't have time to rewrite the entire script in perl. I cannot for the life of me convert this code into something sed-friendly: if ($rpm =~ /(*)-(*)-(*)\.(.*)/)... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: suntzu
1 Replies

5. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Vi Regex help

Can someone tell me what is going with this expression :%s/<C-V><C-M>/. Is there a way to get a more useful message if the carriage return has been deleted? http://objectmix.com/editors/149245-fixing-dos-line-endings-within-vim.html#post516826 Why does this expression work for... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: cokedude
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Regex for First and Last name

I have a regex I'd like to implement and I believe it should be working and I have tested it on various websites that have regex testers but it always says the name is invalid. #!/bin/bash -x echo Enter the users first and last name. read name if... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: woodson2
11 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

read regex from ID file, print regex and line below from source file

I have a file of protein sequences with headers (my source file). Based on a list of IDs (which are included in some of the headers), I'd like to print out only the specified sequences, with only the ID as header. In other words, I'd like to search source.txt for the terms in IDs.txt, and print... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: pathunkathunk
3 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Perl, RegEx - Help me to understand the regex!

I am not a big expert in regex and have just little understanding of that language. Could you help me to understand the regular Perl expression: ^(?!if\b|else\b|while\b|)(?:+?\s+){1,6}(+\s*)\(*\) *?(?:^*;?+){0,10}\{ ------ This is regex to select functions from a C/C++ source and defined in... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: alex_5161
2 Replies

9. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Using Regex

Here i am writing a script to check&display only the valid mail address from a file echo "Plz enter the Target file name with path" read path if then echo "The valid mail address are:" email=$(grep -E -o "\b+@+\.{2,6}\b" $path ) echo "$email" fi The file contains the data like this:... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Meeran Rizvi
6 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Sendmail K command regex: adding exclusion/negative lookahead to regex -a@MATCH

I'm trying to get some exclusions into our sendmail regular expression for the K command. The following configuration & regex works: LOCAL_CONFIG # Kcheckaddress regex -a@MATCH +<@+?\.++?\.(us|info|to|br|bid|cn|ru) LOCAL_RULESETS SLocal_check_mail # check address against various regex... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: RobbieTheK
0 Replies
STRNATCMP(3)								 1							      STRNATCMP(3)

strnatcmp - String comparisons using a ";natural order" algorithm

SYNOPSIS
int strnatcmp (string $str1, string $str2) DESCRIPTION
This function implements a comparison algorithm that orders alphanumeric strings in the way a human being would, this is described as a "natural ordering". Note that this comparison is case sensitive. PARAMETERS
o $str1 - The first string. o $str2 - The second string. RETURN VALUES
Similar to other string comparison functions, this one returns < 0 if $str1 is less than $str2; > 0 if $str1 is greater than $str2, and 0 if they are equal. EXAMPLES
An example of the difference between this algorithm and the regular computer string sorting algorithms (used in strcmp(3)) can be seen below: <?php $arr1 = $arr2 = array("img12.png", "img10.png", "img2.png", "img1.png"); echo "Standard string comparison "; usort($arr1, "strcmp"); print_r($arr1); echo " Natural order string comparison "; usort($arr2, "strnatcmp"); print_r($arr2); ?> The above example will output: Standard string comparison Array ( [0] => img1.png [1] => img10.png [2] => img12.png [3] => img2.png ) Natural order string comparison Array ( [0] => img1.png [1] => img2.png [2] => img10.png [3] => img12.png ) SEE ALSO
preg_match(3), strcasecmp(3), substr(3), stristr(3), strcmp(3), strncmp(3), strncasecmp(3), strnatcasecmp(3), strstr(3), natsort(3), nat- casesort(3). PHP Documentation Group STRNATCMP(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:28 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy