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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting A little help using grep for anagram solving with BASH Post 302332340 by Donthommo on Thursday 9th of July 2009 04:19:35 AM
Old 07-09-2009
Homework? Ha no homework is quite a few years behind me!

Just an exercise I've set myself to revise my shell scripting because i've got interviews coming up.

Thanks for the reply, i'll take a proper look in the morning at the office, have to get to sleep soon.

If anyone has any thoughts on other variations on my idea that might work i'd like to hear them, i'll have another crack at finishing it in the next couple days when i'm done with loadrunner.

---------- Post updated at 09:19 AM ---------- Previous update was at 12:19 AM ----------

Thanks for the reply Perderabo, I tried running your script to see how it functioned but without success, I have not used sed before so not really ideal for helping me revise my scripting knowledge (which is of a fairly basic standard), but thankyou none the less for taking the time to reply.

What I was really after was just an idea of either an option for Grep that I had not thought of or suggestions on how one might go about removing the words from the final temp file that contain extra characters that are not wanted.

I.e. you want to find solutions for the letters 'nma' and you get:
Man
Manager
Mandate
etc etc

Of course the only actual one you want is 'Man' but the others appear because they still contain all the letters...

I'll see what I can come up with today but any thoughts/discussion on the subject is welcome and hopefully I can expand my knowledge a little by getting involved with the online community.

EDIT:


Came up with an idea, I'm going to try something along the lines of:

Load all the letters of the alphabet into an array.
Remove those contained in the user entered variable.
Remove any words from the word list that contain letters left in the array.

In theory this should just leave words contain all the input letters and no others. I still need to work out something for double letters but i'll work on that later.

This way also should take away the need to have it create so many temp files to ween down the results...

Last edited by Donthommo; 07-09-2009 at 05:42 AM..
 

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CHECKBASHISMS(1)					      General Commands Manual						  CHECKBASHISMS(1)

NAME
checkbashisms - check for bashisms in /bin/sh scripts SYNOPSIS
checkbashisms script ... checkbashisms --help|--version DESCRIPTION
checkbashisms, based on one of the checks from the lintian system, performs basic checks on /bin/sh shell scripts for the possible presence of bashisms. It takes the names of the shell scripts on the command line, and outputs warnings if possible bashisms are detected. Note that the definition of a bashism in this context roughly equates to "a shell feature that is not required to be supported by POSIX"; this means that some issues flagged may be permitted under optional sections of POSIX, such as XSI or User Portability. In cases where POSIX and Debian Policy disagree, checkbashisms by default allows extensions permitted by Policy but may also provide options for stricter checking. OPTIONS
--help, -h Show a summary of options. --newline, -n Check for "echo -n" usage (non POSIX but required by Debian Policy 10.4.) --posix, -p Check for issues which are non POSIX but required to be supported by Debian Policy 10.4 (implies -n). --force, -f Force each script to be checked, even if it would normally not be (for instance, it has a bash or non POSIX shell shebang or appears to be a shell wrapper). --extra, -x Highlight lines which, whilst they do not contain bashisms, may be useful in determining whether a particular issue is a false posi- tive which may be ignored. For example, the use of "$BASH_ENV" may be preceded by checking whether "$BASH" is set. --version, -v Show version and copyright information. EXIT VALUES
The exit value will be 0 if no possible bashisms or other problems were detected. Otherwise it will be the sum of the following error val- ues: 1 A possible bashism was detected. 2 A file was skipped for some reason, for example, because it was unreadable or not found. The warning message will give details. SEE ALSO
lintian(1). AUTHOR
checkbashisms was originally written as a shell script by Yann Dirson <dirson@debian.org> and rewritten in Perl with many more features by Julian Gilbey <jdg@debian.org>. DEBIAN
Debian Utilities CHECKBASHISMS(1)
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