01-16-2009
Extracting strings surrounded by parentheses and seperate by commas
Excuse the terrible title.
I have a text file of 1..n lines, each one containing at least one string between parentheses. Within each string, there is one or more strings separated by commas. I need to extract each string, thus:
input file:
(THIS,THAT)
(THE,OTHER)
(THING)
(OR,MAYBE)
(THIS,THING)
Would result in:
THIS
THAT
THE
OTHER
THING
OR
MAYBE
THIS
THING
I'm pulling some stuff over from an IBM mainframe to Unix and I need to do some work on the resulting strings.
awk is it...I just suck at it.
Kindest regards,
Kris
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xstr(1) General Commands Manual xstr(1)
NAME
xstr - extract strings from C programs to implement shared strings
SYNOPSIS
[file]
DESCRIPTION
maintains a file into which strings in component parts of a large program are hashed. These strings are replaced with references to this
common area. This serves to implement shared constant strings, which are most useful if they are also read-only.
The command:
extracts the strings from the C source in name, replacing string references with expressions of the form for some number. An appropriate
declaration of is placed at the beginning of the file. The resulting C text is placed in the file for subsequent compiling. The strings
from this file are placed in the database if they are not there already. Repeated strings and strings that are suffixes of existing
strings do not cause changes to the data base.
After all components of a large program have been compiled, a file declaring the common space, can be created by the command:
This file should then be compiled and loaded with the rest of the program. If possible, the array can be made read-only (shared), saving
space and swap overhead.
can also be used on a single file. A command:
creates files and as before, without using or affecting any file in the same directory.
It may be useful to run after the C preprocessor if any macro definitions yield strings or if there is conditional code containing strings
that are not, in fact, needed. reads from its standard input when the argument is given. An appropriate command sequence for running
after the C preprocessor is:
does not touch the file unless new items are added, thus can avoid remaking unless truly necessary (see make(1)).
WARNINGS
If a string is a suffix of another string in the data base, but the shorter string is seen first by both strings are placed in the data
base, when placing only the longer one there would be sufficient.
AUTHOR
was developed by the University of California, Berkeley.
FILES
Data base of strings
Massaged C source
C source for definition of array
Temp file when `xstr name' does not touch
SEE ALSO
mkstr(1).
xstr(1)