What can I do to set "LC_ALL = C" at per command basises, without changing it system wide?
LC_ALL="C" grep parameters ... Or maybe, at the top of your script:
Quote:
Also, even with the "LC_ALL = C" setting, would it still take 2^n longer time to grep n-character string case insensitively, or the length of the string would not matter that mach?
I suspect that depends on the regex, but I don't think the penalty would be nearly as bad.
Hi,
I have tried to make the conditions similar to the below one's, perhaps, I am not sure if there are any more way's to do that????
if ) ]]
echo "Whatever"
fi (5 Replies)
hi everyone,
I need to do the following thing in a case insesitive mode
sed 's/work/job/g' filename
since work could appear in different form as Work WORK WorK wORK,....
I was wondering if i could do a case insensitive search of a word.
thanks in advance,
:) (4 Replies)
I need to remove a pattern say, ABCD whether it is in uppercase or lowercase from a string. How to do it using SED?
for example
ABCDEF should output to EF
abcdEF should also output to EF (2 Replies)
I'd like to print a line if a substring is matched in a case insensitive manner
something like do a case insensitive search for ABCD as a substring:
awk '{ if (substr($1,1,4) == "") print $1 }' infile > outfile
I'm not certain how to make the syntax work???
Thanks (4 Replies)
Hey , i am trying to do a search for the certain books , and im trying to make it case insensitive. what i have come up with so far is this :
Database.txt
RETARDED MONKEY:RACHEAL ABRAHAML:30:30:20
GOLD:FATIN:23.20:12:3
STUPID:JERLYN:20:40:3
echo -n "Title: "
read Title
echo -n... (3 Replies)
I am using HP-Unix B.11.31.
Question: How to do the case insensitive search using FIND?
Example: I would like list the files with extension of *.SQL & *.sql.
When I try with command find . -type f -name *.sql, it does not lists file with *.SQL. (5 Replies)
Hello ,
Using the below scrip to search a string in a file , by case-insensitively
Please assist on using the toupper() as getting error !.
#!/usr/bin/ksh
set -x
curr_dir=`pwd`
file_ctr=0
printf "\n Reviewing the output file from the directory: %s \n\n" $curr_dir
ls -latr ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Siva SQL
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
locale
locale(3pm) Perl Programmers Reference Guide locale(3pm)NAME
locale - Perl pragma to use or avoid POSIX locales for built-in operations
SYNOPSIS
@x = sort @y; # Unicode sorting order
{
use locale;
@x = sort @y; # Locale-defined sorting order
}
@x = sort @y; # Unicode sorting order again
DESCRIPTION
This pragma tells the compiler to enable (or disable) the use of POSIX locales for built-in operations (for example, LC_CTYPE for regular
expressions, LC_COLLATE for string comparison, and LC_NUMERIC for number formatting). Each "use locale" or "no locale" affects statements
to the end of the enclosing BLOCK.
Starting in Perl 5.16, a hybrid mode for this pragma is available,
use locale ':not_characters';
which enables only the portions of locales that don't affect the character set (that is, all except LC_COLLATE and LC_CTYPE). This is
useful when mixing Unicode and locales, including UTF-8 locales.
use locale ':not_characters';
use open ":locale"; # Convert I/O to/from Unicode
use POSIX qw(locale_h); # Import the LC_ALL constant
setlocale(LC_ALL, ""); # Required for the next statement
# to take effect
printf "%.2f
", 12345.67' # Locale-defined formatting
@x = sort @y; # Unicode-defined sorting order.
# (Note that you will get better
# results using Unicode::Collate.)
See perllocale for more detailed information on how Perl supports locales.
perl v5.16.2 2012-10-11 locale(3pm)