How can I match lines with just one occurance of a string in awk?
Hi,
I'm trying to match records using awk which contain only one occurance of my string, I know how to match one or more (+) but matching only one is eluding me without developing some convoluted bit of code. I was hoping there would be some simple pattern matching thing similar to '+' but which means 'one and only one occurance of'.
My matching code looks like this:
But some records have in their name field multiple names, such as
Quote:
Mr Magoo Mr Smith Miss Demeanor
and I want to not match those records.
Any help with this would be grand!
The only alternative I can think of is some convoluted counting loop which goes through the name split as an array to count if any of the Mr, Mrs, MR, MRS, etc occur more than once, which sounds quite long-winded and unnecessary.
I have a fixed length file in the following format
<date><product_code><other data>
The file size is huge and I have to extract only the lines that match a certain product code which is of 2 bytes length. I cannot use normal grep since that may give undesirable results. When I search for prod... (5 Replies)
Hi folks,
I have a text file that I need to parse, and I cant figure it out. The source is a report breaking down softwares from various companies with some basic info about them (see source snippet below). Ultimately what I want is an excel sheet with only Adobe and Microsoft software name and... (5 Replies)
Hi Guys,
I am new to awk and sed, i am working multiline document, i want to make make that document into SINGLE lines based on occurace of string "dwh".
here's the sample of my problem..
dwh123 2563 4562 4236 1236 78956 12394 4552 dwh192 2656 46536 231326 65652 6565 23262 16625623... (5 Replies)
Hello, can someone help me how to find a word and 2 lines after it and then send the output to another file.
For example, here is myfile1.txt. I want to search for "Error" and 2 lines below it and send it to myfile2.txt
I tried with grep -A but it's not supported on my system.
I tried with awk,... (4 Replies)
Hello,
I need an awk command to print only the lines that match regex on xth field from file.
For example if I use this command
awk -F"|" ' $22 == "20130117090000.*" 'It wont work, I think, because single quotes wont allow the usage of the metacharacter star * . On the other hand I dont know... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I wanted to grep string "ERROR" and "WORNING" after last occurrence of String "Starting" only and wanted to display two lines after searched ERROR and WORNING string and one line before. I have following cronjob log file "errorlog" file and I have written the code for same in Unix as below... (17 Replies)
Data file example
I look for primary and * to isolate the interesting slot number.
slot=`sed '/^primary$/,/\*/!d' filename | tail -1 | sed s'/*//' | awk '{print $1" "$2}'`
Now I want to get the Touch line for only the associate slot number, in this case, because the asterisk... (2 Replies)
URGENT HELP IS NEEDED!!
I am looking to move matching lines (01 - 07) from File1 and 77 tab the matching string from File2, to File3.txt. I am almost done but
- Currently, script is not printing lines to File3.txt in order.
- Also the matching lines are not moving out of File1.txt
... (1 Reply)
In the awk below, what I am attempting to do is check each line in the tab-delimeted input, which has ~20 lines in it, for a keyword
SVTYPE=Fusion. If the keyword is found I am splitting $3 using the . (dot) and reading the portion before and after the dot in an array a.
If it does have that... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
12 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
tcl_stringcasematch
Tcl_StringMatch(3) Tcl Library Procedures Tcl_StringMatch(3)__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________NAME
Tcl_StringMatch, Tcl_StringCaseMatch - test whether a string matches a pattern
SYNOPSIS
#include <tcl.h>
int
Tcl_StringMatch(str, pattern)
int
Tcl_StringCaseMatch(str, pattern, flags)
ARGUMENTS
const char *str (in) String to test.
const char *pattern (in) Pattern to match against string. May contain special characters from the set *?[].
int flags (in) OR-ed combination of match flags, currently only TCL_MATCH_NOCASE. 0 specifies a case-sensitive search.
_________________________________________________________________DESCRIPTION
This utility procedure determines whether a string matches a given pattern. If it does, then Tcl_StringMatch returns 1. Otherwise
Tcl_StringMatch returns 0. The algorithm used for matching is the same algorithm used in the string match Tcl command and is similar to
the algorithm used by the C-shell for file name matching; see the Tcl manual entry for details.
In Tcl_StringCaseMatch, the algorithm is the same, but you have the option to make the matching case-insensitive. If you choose this (by
passing TCL_MATCH_NOCASE), then the string and pattern are essentially matched in the lower case.
KEYWORDS
match, pattern, string
Tcl 8.5 Tcl_StringMatch(3)