09-25-2008
And of course grep -A 5 if your grep has that option. (You should take out the next from Franklin's solution if you want the matching line to print as well. That's what grep -A does and that's what you seem to be asking for in your example. Oh, and the opening brace before c=5 is missing.)
Last edited by era; 09-25-2008 at 03:41 PM..
Reason: Suggest removing "next" from Franklin52's solution
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LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
zegrep
ZGREP(1) BSD General Commands Manual ZGREP(1)
NAME
zgrep, zegrep, zfgrep -- print lines matching a pattern in gzip-compressed files
SYNOPSIS
zgrep [grep-flags] [--] pattern [files ...]
zegrep [grep-flags] [--] pattern [file ...]
zfgrep [grep-flags] [--] pattern [file ...]
DESCRIPTION
zgrep runs grep(1) on files or stdin, if no files argument is given, after decompressing them with zcat(1).
The grep-flags and pattern arguments are passed on to grep(1). If an -e flag is found in the grep-flags, zgrep will not look for a pattern
argument.
zegrep calls egrep(1), while zfgrep calls fgrep(1).
EXIT STATUS
In case of missing arguments or missing pattern, 1 will be returned, otherwise 0.
SEE ALSO
egrep(1), fgrep(1), grep(1), gzip(1), zcat(1)
AUTHORS
Thomas Klausner <wiz@NetBSD.org>
BSD
December 28, 2003 BSD