Hi everybody
for file in *
#Bash performs filename expansion
#+ on expressions that globbing recognizes.
do
output="`grep -n "$1" "$file"`"
echo "$file: `expr "$output" : '\(^.*$\)'`"
done
In the above bash script segment, I try to print just the first line of string named... (3 Replies)
Couldn't find much help on the kind of question I've here:
There is this text file with text as:
Line one has a bingo
Line two does not have a bingo but it has a tango
Bingo is on line three
Line four has both tango and bingo
Now I would want to search for the pattern "bingo" in this file... (3 Replies)
Good Day,
Im new to scripting especially awk and sed. I just would like to ask help from you guys about a sed command that prints the line immediately after a regexp, but not the line containing the regexp.
sed -n '/regexp/{n;p;}' filename
What if my regexp is 3 word or a sentence. Im... (3 Replies)
Greetings all,
...here is yet another string of awk/sed questions from a RegExp-Challenged luser :eek:
I'm looking to have sed/awk do some clean-up on routing tables and to that end, I would like to do the following:
1.) If a line contains the word "masks" or "subnets" prepend CR/LF to... (16 Replies)
Hi,
I'm curious about how to do a very simple thing with regular expressions that I'm unable to figure out.
If I want to find out if a string contains 'a' AND 'b' AND 'c' it can be very easily done with grep:
echo $STRING|grep a|grep b|grep c
but, how would you do that in a single... (9 Replies)
continuing from my previous post, whose link is given below as a reference
https://www.unix.com/shell-programming-scripting/171076-shell-scripting.html#post302573569
consider there is create table commands in a file for eg:
CREATE TABLE `Blahblahblah` (
`id` int(11) NOT NULL... (2 Replies)
I need help with a regexp to find out the ip address which can possibly be present in a URL.
The URLs can be in any of the following form
<domain>?a=12345&d=somestring1
<domain>?c=10.10.10.100&d=somestring1
<domain>?a=12345&b=somestring1&c=10.1.2.4d=somestring2... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying with the below Perl one-liner using regular expression to extract the first and second column of a text file:
perl -p -e "s/\s*(\w+).*/$1/"
perl -p -e "s/\s*.+\s(.+)\s*/$1\n/"
whereas the text file's data looks like:
Error: terminated 2233
Warning: reboot 3434
Warning:... (3 Replies)
I'm probably just not thinking of the correct term to search for :-) But I want to match a pattern that might be 'ABC' or '1ABC' there might be three characters, or there might be four, but if there are four, the first has to be 1 (1 Reply)
Trying to find and replace one string with another string in a file
#!/usr/bin/perl
$csd_table_path = "/file.ntab";
$find_str = '--bundle_type=021';
$repl_str = '--bundle_type=021 --target=/dev/disk1s2';
if( system("/usr/bin/perl -p -i -e 's/$find_str/$repl_str/' $csd_table_path")... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: cillmor
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT BSD
instr
INSTR(3) MBK UTILITY FUNCTIONS INSTR(3)NAME
instr - find an occurence of a string in a string, starting at a specified character.
ORIGIN
This software belongs to the ALLIANCE CAD SYSTEM developed by the ASIM team at LIP6 laboratory of Universite Pierre et Marie CURIE, in
Paris, France.
Web : http://asim.lip6.fr/recherche/alliance/
E-mail : alliance-users@asim.lip6.fr
SYNOPSYS
#include "mut.h"
char *instr(s, find, from)
char *s, *find, from;
PARAMETERS
s Pointer to the string to be searched for the pattern
find Pointer to the string to be found, the pattern
from Character to be searched backwards before searching for the pattern
DESCRIPTION
instr searches the first occurence of the string find in the string s, starting its search at the last occurence of the from character in
the string s.
If either s or find is NULL, the function returns NULL. If from is (char)0, the pattern is searched from the begining of s.
This quite exotic behaviour is useful to search the occurence of a name in a string resulting from a flatten, when only a terminal object
name is to be taken into account.
RETURN VALUES
instr return NULL either if the pattern find is not present in the searched string s, or if one at least of these two string are NULL. If
the pattern is found, a value different from NULL is returned.
EXAMPLE
#include "mut.h"
/* check for the pattern 'ck' anywhere in the string */
#define contains_ck(name)instr(name, "ck", ' ')
/* check for the pattern 'ck' in the signal name, not instance ones */
#define isclock(ptsig) instr(getsigname(ptsig), "ck", SEPAR)
SEE ALSO mbk(1), isvdd(3), isvss(3).
BUG REPORT
This tool is under development at the ASIM department of the LIP6 laboratory.
We need your feedback to improve documentation and tools.
ASIM /LIP6 October 1, 1997 INSTR(3)