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Full Discussion: regular expressions
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers regular expressions Post 302183823 by melanie_pfefer on Thursday 10th of April 2008 02:53:32 AM
Old 04-10-2008
hello,

thanks for the answers but:

find ./ ! -name 'project*[0-9]*.pdf' -name 'project[A-Z]*.pdf'
./projectAbc.pdf
./projectABC.pdf
./projectABC#.pdf



find . -name 'project[A-Z]*.pdf' | grep '/project[A-Z]*\.pdf$'
./projectAbc.pdf
./projectABC.pdf


I want only to display projetABC.pdf

thanks in advance
 

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RE_COMP(3)						   BSD Library Functions Manual 						RE_COMP(3)

NAME
re_comp, re_exec -- regular expression handler LIBRARY
Compatibility Library (libcompat, -lcompat) SYNOPSIS
#include <re_comp.h> char * re_comp(const char *s); int re_exec(const char *s); DESCRIPTION
This interface is made obsolete by regex(3). It is available from the compatibility library, libcompat. The re_comp() function compiles a string into an internal form suitable for pattern matching. The re_exec() function checks the argument string against the last string passed to re_comp(). The re_comp() function returns 0 if the string s was compiled successfully; otherwise a string containing an error message is returned. If re_comp() is passed 0 or a null string, it returns without changing the currently compiled regular expression. The re_exec() function 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 re_comp() and re_exec() may have trailing or embedded newline characters; they are terminated by NULs. The regu- lar expressions recognized are described in the manual entry for ed(1), given the above difference. DIAGNOSTICS
The re_exec() function returns -1 for an internal error. The re_comp() function 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 ALSO
ed(1), egrep(1), ex(1), fgrep(1), grep(1), regex(3) HISTORY
The re_comp() and re_exec() functions appeared in 4.0BSD. BSD
June 4, 1993 BSD
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