Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Pattern matching question
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Pattern matching question Post 302514736 by kevintse on Sunday 17th of April 2011 09:38:36 PM
Old 04-17-2011
I think the problem is [-A-Za-z0-9_.]*, you have a dot within the square brackets, and that would match any characters, spaces included, so that pattern would match the whole string.

What do you want to achieve? you may describe your problem and people here might offer a better solution(Your Regex is too verbose).
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

pattern matching + perl question

i can only find the first occurance of a pattern how do i set it to loop untill all occurances have changed. #! /usr/bin/perl use POSIX; open (DFH_FILE, "./dfh") or die "Can not read file ($!)"; foreach (<DFH_FILE>) { if ($_ !~ /^#|^$/) { chomp; ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Optimus_P
1 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Pattern matching question

Hi guys, I have the following expression : typeset EXBYTEC_CHK=`egrep ^"+${PNUM}" /bb/data/firmexbytes.dta` can anybody please explain to me what ^"+${PNUM}" stands for in egrep statement? Thanks -A (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: aoussenko
3 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

SED Question: Search and Replace start of line to matching pattern

Hi guys, got a problem here with sed on the command line. If i have a string as below: online xx:wer:xcv: sdf:/asdf/http:https-asdfd How can i match the pattern "http:" and replace the start of the string to the pattern with null? I tried the following but it doesn't work: ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: DrivesMeCrazy
3 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

pattern matching question

Hi guys, I have a file in the following format: 4222 323K 323L D222 494 8134 A023 A024 49 812A 9871 9872 492 A961 A962 A963 491 0B77 0B78 0B79 495 0B7A 0B7B 0B7C 4949 WER9 444L 999O I need to grep the line... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: aoussenko
5 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Pattern matching question

Hi Guys, I am trying to setup a check for the string using an "if" statement. The valid entry is only the one which contain Numbers and Capital Alpha-Numeric characters, for example: BA6F, BA6E, BB21 etc... I am using the following "if" constract to check the input, but it fails allowing Small... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: aoussenko
3 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

pattern matching question

Hi Guys I am trying to check if the pattern "# sign followed by one or several tabs till the end of the line" exists in my file. I am using the following query: $ cat myfile | nawk '{if(/^#\t*$/) print "T"}' Unfortunately it does not return the desired output since I know for sure that the line... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: aoussenko
4 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

sed pattern matching question

I inherited a script that contains the following sed command: sed -n -e '/^.*ABCD|/p' $fileName | sed -e 's/^.*ABCD|//' | sed -e 's/|ABCD$//' > ${fileName}.tmp What I'm wondering is whether ABCD has a special pattern matching value in sed, such as a character class similar or identical to . ... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: topmhat
9 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

pattern matching question

Hi guys I have the following case statement in my script: case $pn.$db in *?.fcp?(db)) set f ${pn} cp ;; *?.oxa?(oxa) ) set oxa $pn ;; esac Can somebody help me to understand how to interpret *?.fcp?(db)) or *?.oxa?(oxa) ? I cannot figure out how in this case pattern maching... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: aoussenko
5 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Perl Pattern Matching Question

Hi all, I have a pattern matching problem in which i'm not sure how to attack. Here is my problem: I have a list of strings that appear in the following format: String: LE_(1234 ABC)^2^ABC^DEFG What i need to do is replace all the characters after the first ^ with blank. So the output... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: WongSifu
2 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Bash pattern matching question

I need to check the condition of a variable before the script continues and it needs to match a specific pattern such as EPS-03-0 or PDF-02-1. The first part is a 3 or 4 letter string followed by a hyphen, then a 01,02 or 03 followed by a hyphen then a 0 or a 1. I know I could check for every... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: stormcel
4 Replies
match(1)                                                        Mail Avenger 0.8.3                                                        match(1)

NAME
match - Match strings against glob paterns SYNOPSIS
match [-gilrqs] [-n <n>] [-c cmd] [-x code] {[-p] pattern | -f <file>} str1 [str2 ...] DESCRIPTION
match checks strings against pattern, which should be a shell-like glob pattern. pattern may contain the following special characters: ? A "?" character in pattern matches any single character in the string, except that the "/" character is only matched if match was given the -s option. * A "*" character in pattern matches zero or more characters in the string. The exception is that it will only match "/" characters if match was given the -s option. [...] A set of characters between square brackets matches any character in the set. In addition, the "-" character can be used to specify a range. For example "[+e0-3]" would match any of the characters "+", "e", 0, 1, 2, or 3 in the input string. To include a hyphen ("-") in the set of characters matched, either include the hyphen first or last, or escape it with a "". [!...] A character class preceded by a "!" matches any character but those specified in the class. The exception is that the negated character class will match a "/" only if match was given the -s option. c The backslash character escapes the next character c. Thus, to match a literal "*", you would use the pattern "*". match prints each string that matches pattern, one per line, and exits 0 if one or more strings matched. If no string matches, match exits with status 67 (or whatever alternate status was specified by the -x flag). If the -n n flag was specified, match prints only the text that matched the nth occurrence of "*" in the patten. OPTIONS -f file Specifies that the pattern should be read from file. match will read each line of the file and consider it as pattern to match against the argument strings. For each argument string, match stops when it hits the first matching line of the file. If file does not exist, match exits 67, or whatever code was specified by -x. -g Normally, the -n option selects text matching particular "*" characters in the patern. -g changes this behavior to use parentheses for grouping. Thus, for instance, the text "foo.c" would match pattern "*(.[ch])", and the output with option -n 1 would be ".c". To include a literal "(" or ")" in the pattern with the -g option, you must precede the character with a "". -i Makes the match case insensitive. str will be considered to match if any variation on its capitalization would match. For example, string "G" would match pattern "[f-h]". -l When a pattern matches the string in more than one way, the -l flag says to assign as much text as possible to the leftmost "*"s in the pattern. For example, pattern "*+*" would match text "a+b+c", and the first "*" would match "a+b". This behavior is the default, thus -l's effect is only to undo a previous -r flag. -n n With this flag, match prints the text that matched the nth "*" in the pattern, as opposed to printing the whole string. The leftmost "*" corresponds to -n 1. Specifying -n 0 causes match to print the whole matching string. Specifying -n -1 or using a value greater than the number of "*"s in the pattern causes match not to print anything, in which case you can still use the exit status to see if there is a match. The default value for n is 0, unless -g has also been specified, in which case the default is 1. -c command When -c is specified, match runs command with the system shell (/bin/sh), giving it as argument $0 the full string that matched, and as arguments $1, $2, etc., the parts of the string that matched any "*"s in pattern. If the command does not exit with status 0, match will exit immediately, before processing further matches, with whatever status command returned. The -c and -n flags are mutually exclusive. -p pattern Specifies the pattern to match against. The -p flag is optional; you can specify pattern as the first argument following the options. However, if you want to try matching the same input string against multiple patterns, then you must specify each pattern with a -p flag. -q This option is synonymous with -n -1; it suppresses output when there is a match. You can still determine whether a match occurred by the exit status. -r When a pattern matches the string in more than one way, the -r flag says to assign as much text as possible to the rightmost "*"s in the pattern. For example, with -r, pattern "*+*" would match text "a+b+c" with the "*" matching "a", and the second matching "b+c". -s Ordinarily, "*", "?", and negated character classes ("[!...]") do not match "/" characters. -s changes this behavior to match slashes. -x code By default, when there is no match, match exits with status 67. With this option, match exits with status code, instead. EXAMPLES
Suppose you have a directory with a bunch of files ending .c and .o. If, for each file named foo.c you want to attempt to delete the file foo.o, you can run the following command: match -p '*.c' -c 'rm -f $1.o' *.c Servers running the mailman list manager often send mail from bounce addresses of the form listname-bounces@host.com. If you subscribe to multiple lists on the same server, the mailman interface makes it easier if you subscribe under the same address. To split the mail into multiple folders based on the bounce address in the environment variable SENDER, you might chose a mailbox with the following shell code: name=`match -n1 "*-bounces@host.com" "$SENDER"` && echo "$HOME/Mail/incoming/host-$name.spool" SEE ALSO
avenger(1), avenger.local(8) The Mail Avenger home page: <http://www.mailavenger.org/>. AUTHOR
David Mazieres Mail Avenger 0.8.3 2012-04-05 match(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:21 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy