"@" is an ordinary character in both posix regular expression flavors, basic and extended. According to the standard, in extended regular expressions, preceding an ordinary character with a backslash always yields an undefined result (in basic regular expressions, there are a few defined backslash-ordinary character sequences but none of them involved "@"). It's probably best to ditch "\@" in favor of an unescaped "@".
I know if i use grep -n that the output will have the lines numbered but is there a way to grep the actually line number.
so like this
grep -n "one" /usr/dict/numbers
1:one
21:twenty-one
31:thirty-one
41:forty-one
51:fifty-one
61:sixty-one
71:seventy-one
81:eighty-one
91:ninety-one
... (1 Reply)
Hi Folks,
I am searching for a pattern in logs through putty by opening the file in vi editor
and reaching to the last of the file by $ and then searching the pattern , lets say I have to search the pattern abc then it would be ?abc Now I want line numbers along with the matching pattern to be... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have got the below requirement. please suggest.
I have a file like,
Processing Item is:
/data/ing/cfg2/abc.txt
/data/ing/cfg3/bgc.txt
Processing Item is:
/data/cmd/for2/ght.txt
/data/kernal/config.klgt.txt
I want to process the above file to get the output file like,
... (5 Replies)
I'm trying to grep lines where the digits at the end of each line are greater than digits. Tried this but it will only allow me to specify 2 digits. Any ideas would greatly be appreciated. grep -i '\<\{3,4,5\}\>' file
---------- Post updated at 05:58 PM ---------- Previous update was at 05:41... (1 Reply)
here is what i want to achieve.. i have a file with below contents
cat fileName
blah blah blah
.
.DROP this
REJECT that
.
--sport 7800 -j REJECT --reject-with icmp-port-unreachable
--dport 7800 -j REJECT --reject-with icmp-port-unreachable
.
.
.
more blah blah blah
--dport 3306... (14 Replies)
Hai,
I want to select only line numbers into a file if some pattern matches. I have written my script like below but its not working.
#!/bin/sh
file='/home/testfile1'
filesearch='/home/test00'
while read line
do
search=`echo $line |cut -c 1-24`
echo $search
echo `grep -n ""... (3 Replies)
We are using Red Hat Linux.
I have a flat file with among other things, the following lines, which appear occasionally throughout the file:
Using sed, I delete this line:
L;L;L;L;R;R;R;L;R;L;R;R;R;L;L;L
With:
/^;;;;;*/d
Works fine every time.
However, I cannot delete... (6 Replies)
Hi ,
I have a file where i have modifed certain things compared to original file . The difference of the original file and modified file is as follows.
# diff mir_lex.c.modified mir_lex.c.orig
3209c3209
< if(yy_current_buffer -> yy_is_our_buffer == 0) {
---
>... (5 Replies)
How would you grep for a line containing only 5 numbers? Something like this.
10 2 12 1 13 (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: cokedude
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MINIX
grep
GREP(1) General Commands Manual GREP(1)NAME
grep - search a file for lines containing a given pattern
SYNOPSIS
grep [-elnsv] pattern [file] ...
OPTIONS -e-e pattern is the same as pattern
-c Print a count of lines matched
-i Ignore case
-l Print file names, no lines
-n Print line numbers
-s Status only, no printed output
-v Select lines that do not match
EXAMPLES
grep mouse file # Find lines in file containing mouse
grep [0-9] file # Print lines containing a digit
DESCRIPTION
Grep searches one or more files (by default, stdin) and selects out all the lines that match the pattern. All the regular expressions
accepted by ed and mined are allowed. In addition, + can be used instead of * to mean 1 or more occurrences, ? can be used to mean 0 or 1
occurrences, and | can be used between two regular expressions to mean either one of them. Parentheses can be used for grouping. If a
match is found, exit status 0 is returned. If no match is found, exit status 1 is returned. If an error is detected, exit status 2 is
returned.
SEE ALSO cgrep(1), fgrep(1), sed(1), awk(9).
GREP(1)