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Full Discussion: Strange RegExp Behaviour
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Strange RegExp Behaviour Post 302502211 by itskov on Monday 7th of March 2011 07:56:24 AM
Old 03-07-2011
Hey!

Thanks for the fast reply !

But the RegExp you wrote will accept strings of the form 'xxxx' and 'yyyy'.
I'm looking for a pattern that maches on 'xyyx' (Where x is different character then y).

Thanks a lot again.
Eyal.
 

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gmatch(3GEN)                                         String Pattern-Matching Library Functions                                        gmatch(3GEN)

NAME
gmatch - shell global pattern matching SYNOPSIS
cc [ flag ... ] file ... -lgen [ library ... ] #include <libgen.h> int gmatch(const char *str, const char *pattern); DESCRIPTION
gmatch() checks whether the null-terminated string str matches the null-terminated pattern string pattern. See the sh(1), section File Name Generation, for a discussion of pattern matching. A backslash () is used as an escape character in pattern strings. RETURN VALUES
gmatch() returns non-zero if the pattern matches the string, zero if the pattern does not. EXAMPLES
Example 1: Examples of gmatch() function. In the following example, gmatch() returns non-zero (true) for all strings with "a" or "-" as their last character. char *s; gmatch (s, "*[a-]" ) ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |MT-Level |MT-Safe | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
sh(1), attributes(5) NOTES
When compiling multithreaded applications, the _REENTRANT flag must be defined on the compile line. This flag should only be used in mul- tithreaded applications. SunOS 5.10 29 Dec 1996 gmatch(3GEN)
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