Thank you so much, it worked as expected
Need another detail. In our source file, we used to receive '~^' as delimiter, through the script we will replace this with 'ACK' ('\006'). Could you please provide the how the above command can be used for the delimiter '~^'. Need to know the hexadecimal value for this delimiter '~^'
Thanks & regards
Srik
Something like this?
This User Gave Thanks to Franklin52 For This Post:
Hi everyone.
Could u be so kind and help me with on "simple" shell script?
1. i need to search a file line by line for a pattern.
example of a lines in that file
2947 domain = feD,id = 00 0A 02 48 17 1E 1D 39 DE 00 0E 00,Name
Values:snNo = f10
Add AttFlag = 0
2. i need to find... (0 Replies)
Hi all
I need to replace all characters in a file except for the matching pattern
eg.
I need to replace all character with '*' except for the pattern "abc"
Input
"sdfhgsdf abc ##%$#abcsdfh sdfjkfff"
Output
"******abc******abc*************"
Request for single liner solution (1 Reply)
Hello,
Despite reading the Pattern Matching chapter in the O'Reilly Sed & Awk book several times and
looking at numerous examples, I cannot seem to get any kind of conditional script to work in my awk scripts!
I am able to do the basic awk and grep script to capture the data but when I do with... (0 Replies)
Hi,
In my shell script i have to match a patten in a file , if found i have to prefix the entair line by a "word"
eg. pattern = "aaa" prefix= #123
file: bbbb xxx
zzzz aaaa
qqqq kkkk
outPut file: bbbb xxx
... (5 Replies)
Hi!
i'm trying to parse textfiles against a pattern and storing the result in a variable.
The strings i want to get are embraced by and can occur several times in one line, so e.g.
some text anything else endwhat i have so far:
#!/bin/bash
for f in $*
do
exec 3<&0
exec 0<$f
... (2 Replies)
I have file 1 & file 2 with content mentioned below. I want to get the output as shown in file3.
Requirement:
check the content of column 1 & column 2, if value of column 1 in file1 matches with first column of file2 then remaining columns(2&3) of file2 should get replaced, also if value of... (4 Replies)
Dear Unix Forums,
I am hoping you can help me with a pattern matching problem.
What am I trying to do?
I want to replace multiple lines of a text file (that match a multi-line pattern) with a single line of text. These patterns can span several lines and do not always have the same number of... (10 Replies)
I have an awk related question that I was hoping you all could help with.
I am given 2 input files named OLDFILE and NEWFILE, and a Master file named MASTERFILE. They can be seen below.
OLDFILE:
a
a
a
a
a
f
g
4
5
7
8
1
2
3 (1 Reply)
string="din&esh\nisgood"
File.txt:
the name is
sed "s#\#${string}#g" File.txt
Output am getting:
the name is dinesh
is good
Expected output:
the name is din&esh\nisgood
The input string is dynamic it will be keep on changing
am able to handle & by placing \& in the string.. (5 Replies)
Hi,
I want to know which pattern matching technique will be giving better performance and quick result.
I will be having the patterns in a file and want to read that patterns and search through a whole file of say 70 MB size. whether if i initially create a pattern matching string while... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: ananan
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
regexp::common::delimited
Regexp::Common::delimited(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Regexp::Common::delimited(3)NAME
Regexp::Common::delimited -- provides a regex for delimited strings
SYNOPSIS
use Regexp::Common qw /delimited/;
while (<>) {
/$RE{delimited}{-delim=>'"'}/ and print 'a " delimited string';
/$RE{delimited}{-delim=>'/'}/ and print 'a / delimited string';
}
DESCRIPTION
Please consult the manual of Regexp::Common for a general description of the works of this interface.
Do not use this module directly, but load it via Regexp::Common.
$RE{delimited}{-delim}{-esc}
Returns a pattern that matches a single-character-delimited substring, with optional internal escaping of the delimiter.
When "-delim=S" is specified, each character in the sequence S is a possible delimiter. There is no default delimiter, so this flag must
always be specified.
If "-esc=S" is specified, each character in the sequence S is the delimiter for the corresponding character in the "-delim=S" list. The
default escape is backslash.
For example:
$RE{delimited}{-delim=>'"'} # match "a " delimited string"
$RE{delimited}{-delim=>'"'}{-esc=>'"'} # match "a "" delimited string"
$RE{delimited}{-delim=>'/'} # match /a / delimited string/
$RE{delimited}{-delim=>q{'"}} # match "string" or 'string'
Under "-keep" (See Regexp::Common):
$1 captures the entire match
$2 captures the opening delimiter (provided only one delimiter was specified)
$3 captures delimited portion of the string (provided only one delimiter was specified)
$4 captures the closing delimiter (provided only one delimiter was specified)
$RE{quoted}{-esc}
A synonym for $RE{delimited}{q{-delim='"`}{...}}
SEE ALSO
Regexp::Common for a general description of how to use this interface.
AUTHOR
Damian Conway (damian@conway.org)
MAINTAINANCE
This package is maintained by Abigail (regexp-common@abigail.be).
BUGS AND IRRITATIONS
Bound to be plenty.
For a start, there are many common regexes missing. Send them in to regexp-common@abigail.be.
LICENSE and COPYRIGHT
This software is Copyright (c) 2001 - 2009, Damian Conway and Abigail.
This module is free software, and maybe used under any of the following licenses:
1) The Perl Artistic License. See the file COPYRIGHT.AL.
2) The Perl Artistic License 2.0. See the file COPYRIGHT.AL2.
3) The BSD Licence. See the file COPYRIGHT.BSD.
4) The MIT Licence. See the file COPYRIGHT.MIT.
perl v5.16.2 2010-02-23 Regexp::Common::delimited(3)