My apologies for likely being unclear. My initial grep statement and your first awk statement had the same output, lines containing search terms and the following three lines. It was the different number of following lines for each term that I was unable to figure out.
For other's references this can be extended to n search terms.
The above will print term1 and the following 1 lines ( two lines total ), term2 and the following 2 lines (three lines total ), and term 3 and the following 3 lines ( four lines total).
I am having a heck of a time trying to write a script that will grep for multiple strings in a single file. I am really at my wits end here and I am hoping to get some feedback here.
Basic information:
OS: Solaris 9
Shell: KSH
Oracle Database server
I was trying to grep through a file... (5 Replies)
Is there anyway you can grep using multiple wildcards? When I run the below line the results return fine;
grep 12345 /usr/local/production/soccermatchplus/distributor/clients/*/out/fixtures.xml | awk -F/ '{print $8}'
However ideally, I need it to grep for;
grep 12345... (3 Replies)
I've got this command that I've been using to find strings on the same line, say I'm doing a search for name:
find . -name "*" | xargs grep -i "Doe" | grep -i "John" > output.txt
This gives me every line in a file that has John and Doe in it. I'm looking to add a OR operator for the second... (5 Replies)
Hello, I have a block of code (XML) that I would like to grep for certain information. The basic format of the XML is the following repeated a few hundred times, each time with a unique ID:
<Identifier ID="A" NAME="John Doe" AGE="32 Years" FAMILY="4" SEX="MALE"></Identfier>
I would like to... (6 Replies)
Hi All,
I'm trying to grep for 3 patterns in a string of gibberish. It so happens that each line is appended by a date/time stamp and i was able to figure out how to extract only the datetime.
here is the string..
i have to display
tinker tailor soldier spy
Please can some help... (2 Replies)
I have a file that is a sort library in the format:
##def title1
content1
stuff1
content2
stuff2
##enddef
##def title2
etc..
I want to grep def and content and pull some trailing context from content
so the result would look something like: (1 Reply)
Hi all,
I'll like to search a list of tems in a huge file and then output each of the terms to individual files. I know I can use grep -f list main.file to search them but how can I split the output into individual files? Thank you. (6 Replies)
HI
I have a file with output as
System: cu=4 ent=0.1 mode=on
cu min u s w i
0 500 0.1 0.3 0.5 0.1
1 200 0.5 0.2 0.3 0.0
I need to grep the values of following column fields u, s, w and i from each row sum them up and store in a variable..:(
Please help.. (3 Replies)
I have 3-column tab separated data that looks like the following:
act of+n-a-large+vn-tell-v 0.067427
act_com of+n+n-a-large-manufacturer-n 0.129922
act-act_com-com in+n-j+vn-pass-aux-restate-v 0.364499666667
com nmod+n-j+ns-invader-n 0.527521
act_com-com obj+n-a-j+vd-contribute-v 0.091413... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: owwow14
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT PLAN9
grep
GREP(1) General Commands Manual GREP(1)NAME
grep - search a file for a pattern
SYNOPSIS
grep [ option ... ] pattern [ file ... ]
DESCRIPTION
Grep searches the input files (standard input default) for lines (with newlines excluded) that match the pattern, a regular expression as
defined in regexp(6). Normally, each line matching the pattern is `selected', and each selected line is copied to the standard output.
The options are
-c Print only a count of matching lines.
-h Do not print file name tags (headers) with output lines.
-i Ignore alphabetic case distinctions. The implementation folds into lower case all letters in the pattern and input before interpre-
tation. Matched lines are printed in their original form.
-l (ell) Print the names of files with selected lines; don't print the lines.
-L Print the names of files with no selected lines; the converse of -l.
-n Mark each printed line with its line number counted in its file.
-s Produce no output, but return status.
-v Reverse: print lines that do not match the pattern.
Output lines are tagged by file name when there is more than one input file. (To force this tagging, include /dev/null as a file name
argument.)
Care should be taken when using the shell metacharacters $*[^|()= and newline in pattern; it is safest to enclose the entire expression in
single quotes '...'.
SOURCE
/sys/src/cmd/grep.c
SEE ALSO ed(1), awk(1), sed(1), sam(1), regexp(6)DIAGNOSTICS
Exit status is null if any lines are selected, or non-null when no lines are selected or an error occurs.
GREP(1)