What is the regular expression that correponds to "all characters are capital"?
find doesn't actually support full regular expressions, and therein lies your real problem. But pipe it to something which does, and it should be easy.
The wildcard in the find command line matches [A-Z] followed by anything. You can't easily say "anything except" in wildcards. However, you can pipe the matches to grep, which does support full regular expressions; the regular expression means something slightly different: it says [A-Z] zero or more times. So the asterisk has a different meaning there, and allows you to express the constraint that you have.
I have following content in the file
CancelPolicyMultiLingual3=U|PC3|EN
RestaurantInfoCode1=U|restID1|1
.....
I am trying to use following matching extression
\|(+)
to get this
PC3|EN
restID1|1
Obviously it does not work.
Any ideas? (13 Replies)
Hi Gurus,
I need help with regular expressions. I want to create a regular expression which will take only alpha-numeric characters for 7 characters long and will throw out an error if longer than that.
i tried various combinations but couldn't get it, please help me how to get it guys.
... (2 Replies)
Hello,
Let say I have a string with content "Free 100%". How can extract only "100" using ksh? I would this machanism to work if instead of "100" there is any kind of combination of numbers(ex. "32", "1238", "1"). I want to get only the digits.
I have written something like this:
... (4 Replies)
Hi,
below is a piece of code written by my predecessor at work.
I'm kind of a newbie and am trying to figure out all the regular expressions in this piece of code.
It is really a tough time for me to figure out all the regular expressions.
Please shed some light on the regular expressions... (3 Replies)
In regular expressions with grep(or egrep), ^ works if we want something in starting of line..but what if we write ^^^ or ^ for pattern matching??..Hope u all r familiar with regular expressions for pattern matching.. (1 Reply)
#!/usr/bin/perl
$word = "one last challenge";
if ( $word =~ /^(\w+).*\s(\w+)$/ )
{
print "$1";
print "\n";
print "$2";
}
The output shows that "$1" is with result one and "$2" is with result challenge. I am confused about how this pattern match expression works step by step. I... (8 Replies)
I have a file that I'm trying to find all the cases of phone number extensions and deleting them. So input file looks like:
abc
x93825
def
13234
x52673
hello
output looks like:
abc
def
13234
hello
Basically delete lines that have 5 numbers following "x". I tried: x\(4) but it... (7 Replies)
I am new to shell scripts.Can u please help me on this req.
test_user = "Arun"
if
echo "test_user is a word"
else
echo "test_user is not a word" (1 Reply)
I need to pick a part of string lets stay started with specific character and end with specific character to replace using sed command
the line is like this:my audio book 71-skhdfon1dufgjhgf8.wav'
I want to move the characters beginning with - end before.
I have different files with random... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: XP_2600
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
regex
regex(3) Library Functions Manual regex(3)Name
re_comp, re_exec - regular expression handler
Syntax
char *re_comp(s)
char *s;
re_exec(s)
char *s;
Description
The subroutine compiles a string into an internal form suitable for pattern matching. The subroutine checks the argument string against
the last string passed to
The subroutine returns 0 if the string s was compiled successfully; otherwise a string containing an error message is returned. If is
passed 0 or a null string, it returns without changing the currently compiled regular expression.
The subroutine returns 1 if the string s matches the last compiled regular expression, 0 if the string s failed to match the last compiled
regular expression, and -1 if the compiled regular expression was invalid (indicating an internal error).
The strings passed to both and may have trailing or embedded newline characters; they are terminated by nulls. The regular expressions
recognized are described in the manual entry for given the above difference.
Diagnostics
The subroutine returns -1 for an internal error.
The subroutine returns one of the following strings if an error occurs:
No previous regular expression
Regular expression too long
unmatched (
missing ]
too many () pairs
unmatched )
See Alsoed(1), ex(1), egrep(1), fgrep(1), grep(1)regex(3)