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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting regular expression at the end of grep Post 302428951 by dr.house on Friday 11th of June 2010 09:46:22 AM
Old 06-11-2010
AFAIK ^ and $ are meant to match the beginning and end, respectively, of a whole string, not a substring.
 

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MEMMEM(3)						     Linux Programmer's Manual							 MEMMEM(3)

NAME
memmem - locate a substring SYNOPSIS
#define _GNU_SOURCE #include <string.h> void *memmem(const void *haystack, size_t haystacklen, const void *needle, size_t needlelen); DESCRIPTION
The memmem() function finds the start of the first occurrence of the substring needle of length needlelen in the memory area haystack of length haystacklen. RETURN VALUE
The memmem() function returns a pointer to the beginning of the substring, or NULL if the substring is not found. CONFORMING TO
This function is a GNU extension. BUGS
This function was broken in Linux libraries up to and including libc 5.0.9; there the needle and haystack arguments were interchanged, and a pointer to the end of the first occurrence of needle was returned. Both old and new libc's have the bug that if needle is empty, haystack-1 (instead of haystack) is returned. And glibc 2.0 makes it worse, returning a pointer to the last byte of haystack. This is fixed in glibc 2.1. SEE ALSO
strstr(3), feature_test_macros(7) COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.25 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. GNU
2008-12-05 MEMMEM(3)
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