Finding lines with a regular expression, replacing them with blank lines
So the tag for this forum says all newbies welcome...
All I want to do is go through my file and find lines which contain a given string of characters then replace these with a blank line. I really tried to find a simple command to do this but failed.
Here's what I did come up with though:
So I find a REGEXP, replace that and the rest of the line with "MARKER", then I replace the start of the line, including "MARKER" with nothing, thus leaving behind a blank entry...
I am trying to use regular expression to identify ONLY the commands that hasn't the word "tablespace" within it. a command starts with "create table" and ends with ; (semicolon)
example file:
create table first tablespace ;
create table second
(
BBL_CUSTOMER_NAME VARCHAR2(32),
a... (7 Replies)
Hi i am trying to replace blank lines with a number 0. I tried the following code
awk '{print NF ? $0: blankrow}' blankrow = "0" file1.prg>file2.prg
however i get the following error: fatal: cannot open file `blankrow' for reading (No such file or directory)
file example:
1
2
3
5
6... (11 Replies)
Hi,
I need a regular expression grepping all lines starting with '*' followed by a VARIOUS number of blanks and then followed by the string 'Runjob=1'.
I tried that code, but it doesn't work:
grep -i '*'+'Runjob=1' INPUT_FILE >>OUTPUT_FILE
Can someone help me?
Thanks (8 Replies)
Hey, I found a way to print the lines which is just before a regular expression, not including the expression.
sed -n '/regexp/{n;p;}' myfile
Now I'm looking for a way to print all lines, exept the regular expression and also the line before the same regular expression.
Use code tags. (1 Reply)
I would like to print 3 lines after a regular expression is found in the logfile. I'm using the following code:
grep -n "$reg_exp" file.txt |while read LINE ;do i=$(echo $LINE |cut -d':' -f1 ) ;sed -n "$i,$(($i+3))p" file.txt ;done
The above code things works fine,but sometimes gives erroneous... (3 Replies)
Hi.. I'm facing a trouble in replacing two blank lines in a file using shell script...
I used sed to search a line and insert two blank lines after the searchd line using the following sed command.
Sed "/data/{G;G;}/" filename. In the file, after data tag, two lines got inserted blank lines.. Now... (1 Reply)
Hi.. I'm facing a trouble in replacing two blank lines in a file using shell script...
I used sed to search a line and insert two blank lines after the searchd line using the following sed command.
sed "/data/{G;G;}/" filename . In the file, after data tag, two lines got inserted blank lines..... (4 Replies)
I have a very large file (over 700 million lines) that has some lines that I need to delete. An example of 5 lines of the file:
HS4_80:8:2303:19153:193032 153 k80:138891
HS4_80:8:2105:5544:43174 89 k88:81949
165 k88:81949 323 0 * = 323 0 ... (6 Replies)
Using a regular expression, I would like multiple lines to be matched.
By default, a period (.) matches any character except newline. However, (?s) and /s modifiers are supposed to force . to accept a newline and to match any character including a newline.
However, the following two perl... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: LessNux
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
match
MATCH(1L) Schily's USER COMMANDS MATCH(1L)NAME
match - searches for patterns in files
SYNOPSIS
match [ -option ] pattern [ file ... ]
DESCRIPTION
Match searches the named files or standard input (if no filenames are given) for the occurrences of the given pattern on each line. The
program accepts literal characters or special pattern matching characters. All lines that match the pattern are output on standard output.
You can only specify one pattern string for each match, however, you can construct an arbitrarily complex string. When you do not specify
a file, match can be used as a filter to display desired lines. Standard in is used if no files are specified.
OPTIONS -not, -v
Prints all lines that do not match.
-i Ignore the case of letters
-m Force not to use the magic mode
-w Search for pattern as a word
-x Display only those lines which match exactly
-c Display matching count for each file
-l Display name of each file which matches
-s Be silent indicate match in exit code
-h Do not display filenames
-n Precede matching lines with line number (with respect to the input file)
-b Precede matching lines with block number
REGULAR EXPRESSIONS
The following is a table of all the pattern matching characters:
c An ordinary character (not one of the special characters discussed below) is a one character regular expression that matches that
character.
c A backslash () followed by any special character is a one character regular expression that matches the special character itself.
The special characters are:
! # % * { } [ ] ? ^ $
! Logical OR as in match this!that!the_other. You may have to use `{}' for precedence grouping.
# A hash mark followed by any regular expression matches any number (including zero) occurrences of the regular expression.
? Matches exactly any one character. W? matches Wa, Wb, Wc, W1, W2, W3 ...
* Matches any number of any character.
% Matches exactly nothing. It can be used in groups of ored patterns to specify that an empty alternative is possible.
{} Curly brackets may be used to enclose patterns to specify a precedence grouping, and may be nested. {%!{test}}version matches the
strings testversion and version.
[string]
A non empty string of characters enclosed in square brackets is a one character regular expression that matches any one character in
that string. If however the first character of the string is a circumflex (^), the one character expression matches any character
which is not in the string. The ^ has this special meaning only if it occurs first in the string. The minus (-) may be used to indi-
cate a range of consecutive ASCII characters; for example, [0-9] is equivalent to any one of the digits. The - loses it's special
meaning if it occurs first (after an initial ^, if any) or last in the string. The right square bracket (]) and the backslash ()
must be quoted with a backslash if you want to use it within the string.
^ Matches the beginning of a line.
$ Matches the end of a line. (^*$ matches any entire line)
EXAMPLES FILES
None.
SEE ALSO grep(1), fgrep(1), egrep(1)DIAGNOSTICS NOTES
Even if a match occurs more than once per line, the line is output only once.
Quote special pattern matching characters to prevent them from being expanded by the Command Interpreter.
BUGS
The length of the pattern is currently limited to 100 characters.
This limit is reduced by 38 if the -w option is used.
Joerg Schilling 15. Juli 1988 MATCH(1L)