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Homework and Emergencies Homework & Coursework Questions Help with using different types of GREP Post 302577119 by SilvarHawke on Monday 28th of November 2011 08:45:29 AM
Old 11-28-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by vbe
To check in on solaris:
Code:
 uname -sr

What have you managed so far?
e.g.
Code:
grep '.*:[10]:*:*:*$' carslist.txt

Explain to me what the above code is supposed to do.
I'm not sure I undrstand what you mean by 'what I've managed' sorry. Smilie

And yeah, in that code I am trying to find all the car models which include digits within their name. Each .* is a seperate column in the layout from the text file, and the second column is the model, which is what I have labeled [10] with.

Hopefully I explained this without much confusion.
 

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WCWIDTH(3)						   BSD Library Functions Manual 						WCWIDTH(3)

NAME
wcwidth, wcwidth_l -- number of column positions of a wide-character code LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc) SYNOPSIS
#include <wchar.h> int wcwidth(wchar_t wc); #include <wchar.h> #include <xlocale.h> int wcwidth_l(wchar_t wc, locale_t loc); DESCRIPTION
The wcwidth() function determines the number of column positions required to display the wide character wc. Although the wcwidth() function uses the current locale, the wcwidth_l() function may be passed a locale directly. See xlocale(3) for more information. RETURN VALUES
The wcwidth() function returns 0 if the wc argument is a null wide character (L''), -1 if wc is not printable; otherwise, it returns the number of column positions the character occupies. EXAMPLES
This code fragment reads text from standard input and breaks lines that are more than 20 column positions wide, similar to the fold(1) util- ity: wint_t ch; int column, w; column = 0; while ((ch = getwchar()) != WEOF) { w = wcwidth(ch); if (w > 0 && column + w >= 20) { putwchar(L' '); column = 0; } putwchar(ch); if (ch == L' ') column = 0; else if (w > 0) column += w; } SEE ALSO
iswprint(3), wcswidth(3), xlocale(3) STANDARDS
The wcwidth() function conforms to IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 (``POSIX.1''). BSD
August 17, 2004 BSD
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