03-02-2010
= is used to get the current line number.
x is used to exchange the contents of pattern space and hold space.
For more details refer the following link.
Sed's Commands
Last edited by kiruthika_sri; 03-02-2010 at 05:02 AM..
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I am using GnuWin32 sed and am having trouble with the regexp - i.e., they don't behave the same way as in UNIX (POSIX and and all that). I have a stream of data, e.g.:
11111'222?'22'33?'333'44444'55555'
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please help:
I want to add 1 space between string and numbers:
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abcd12345
output file:
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Andy (2 Replies)
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Basically it should identify what ever is in between /*< >*/ (tags) and replace dbname ending with (.) with the words in between the tags
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Hi all,
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Hi,
I am not that good with reg exp and sed. But I was just looking at something the other day and came across a situation.
When I ran the below command:
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Hi!
I have a file with multiple lines following this format:
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Dealing with Linux servers
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G'day,
Here's a teaser for a sed guru, which I surely am not one, as even my
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OFF 00280456 - 2014|1|2020_STATUS|GROUP_NAME|SUBGROUP_NAME|CLASS_NAME|GROUP_ID|SUBGROUP_ID
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
cmigrep
CMIGREP(1) General Commands Manual CMIGREP(1)
NAME
cmigrep - search in ocaml compiled interface files
SYNOPSIS
cmigrep <options> <module-expression>
DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents briefly the cmigrep command. This manual page was written for the Debian GNU/Linux distribution because the
original program does not have a manual page.
cmigrep allows to search for information in compiled interfaces of OCaml modules. By default, the search applies to the modules described
in the .cmi files in the curent directory and in the ocaml standard directory, but this can be changed with the -I option (see below).
The argument <module-expr> can be an exact module name, or a shell wildcard. Multiple modules can be specified. Example: "ModA ModB
Foo*.Make" means to search ModA, ModB, and any submodule Make of a module that starts with Foo.
OPTIONS
General Options
-I directory
Add directory to the search path for modules
-package packages
comma separated list of findlib packages to search
open modules
comma separated list of open modules (in order!)
-help, --help
display list of options
Search Patterns
-t regexp
print types with matching names
-r regexp
print record field labels with matching names
-c regexp
print constructors with matching names
-p regexp
print polymorphic variants with matching names
-m regexp
print all matching module names in the path
-e regexp
print exceptions with matching constructors
-v regexp
print values with matching names
-o regexp
print all classes with matching names
-a regexp
print all names which match the given expression
SEE ALSO
Examples can be found on /usr/share/doc/cmigrep/README.
AUTHOR
cmigrep is written by Eric Stokes <letaris@mac.com>.
This manual page was compiled by Ralf Treinen <treinen@debian.org>.
CMIGREP(1)