Setting awk's field separator to "" makes it split a string into individual characters, letting you alter each index individually. awk also has an elegant way to set variables without having to jam them into the expression itself.
Text arbitrarily split with \ just so people don't unexpectedly find their browsers over a mile wide.
Some versions of awk may be limited to 2048 characters per line. But some versions of sed are too.
Hello
A couple of weeks ago, I added a user to an AIX 5.3 system.
I go to add one today, and it appears that when creating a user in smit, I cannot see any groups.
No primary groups
No Group set
No Admin Groups
The /etc/group and etc/secuity/group files seem to be intact.
I did... (4 Replies)
Hello,
I am searching all over the place for this, just not finding anything solid :(
I want to do be able to access the groups that are matched with grep (either with extended regex, or perl compatible regex). For instance:
echo "abcd" | egrep "a(b(c(d)))"
Of course this returns... (1 Reply)
I am having trouble parsing rpm filenames in a shell script.. I found a snippet of perl code that will perform the task but I really don't have time to rewrite the entire script in perl. I cannot for the life of me convert this code into something sed-friendly:
if ($rpm =~ /(*)-(*)-(*)\.(.*)/)... (1 Reply)
Must I be in a group? I am using Ubuntu and am the only user on my PC. I know how to change groups but do not see a way to not be in a group. Any help would be appreciated. (2 Replies)
Hello,
Although I have found similar questions, I could not find
advice that could help with my problem. The issue:
I am trying to replace all occurrences of a regex, but
I cannot make the regex groups work together.
This is a simple input test file:
The Vedanta Philosophy... (3 Replies)
I have a file of protein sequences with headers (my source file). Based on a list of IDs (which are included in some of the headers), I'd like to print out only the specified sequences, with only the ID as header.
In other words, I'd like to search source.txt for the terms in IDs.txt, and print... (3 Replies)
I am having trouble with regex capturing groups, For Ex :
I am having a file with
ABC CDLF SFSDFK PRIMARY INDEX(XYZ,DEF,GHI);
XYZ FLJ SDFKLD; PRIMARY INDEX(ABC);
BHI SDKFLFLSFD PRIMARY INDEX (QWE , RTY , LHJ);
My output should be :
ABC XYZ,DEF,GHI
XYZ ABC
BHI ... (10 Replies)
I am not a big expert in regex and have just little understanding of that language.
Could you help me to understand the regular Perl expression:
^(?!if\b|else\b|while\b|)(?:+?\s+){1,6}(+\s*)\(*\) *?(?:^*;?+){0,10}\{
------
This is regex to select functions from a C/C++ source and defined in... (2 Replies)
I'm trying to get some exclusions into our sendmail regular expression for the K command. The following configuration & regex works:
LOCAL_CONFIG
#
Kcheckaddress regex -a@MATCH
+<@+?\.++?\.(us|info|to|br|bid|cn|ru)
LOCAL_RULESETS
SLocal_check_mail
# check address against various regex... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: RobbieTheK
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
re_comp
RE_COMP(3) Linux Programmer's Manual RE_COMP(3)NAME
re_comp, re_exec - BSD regex functions
SYNOPSIS
#define _REGEX_RE_COMP
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <regex.h>
char *re_comp(char *regex);
int re_exec(char *string);
DESCRIPTION
re_comp() is used to compile the null-terminated regular expression pointed to by regex. The compiled pattern occupies a static area, the
pattern buffer, which is overwritten by subsequent use of re_comp(). If regex is NULL, no operation is performed and the pattern buffer's
contents are not altered.
re_exec() is used to assess whether the null-terminated string pointed to by string matches the previously compiled regex.
RETURN VALUE
re_comp() returns NULL on successful compilation of regex otherwise it returns a pointer to an appropriate error message.
re_exec() returns 1 for a successful match, zero for failure.
CONFORMING TO
4.3BSD.
NOTES
These functions are obsolete; the functions documented in regcomp(3) should be used instead.
SEE ALSO regcomp(3), regex(7), GNU regex manual
COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.25 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can
be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
GNU 1995-07-14 RE_COMP(3)