You're a bit unclear as to what the format of the input exactly is. Assuming that it consists of newline separated records, and the only thing from the file that you want printed is the text after the word "Replaced", and that the word "Replaced" is the first word on the line, then this should work:
If there are words after "disk," "memory," or what ever that should be deleted too, then this should work:
Hi,
I am trying to do something with grep, but for some reason I just can't get it to to work.
I am looking for find a match in the second field, the length must be 10 characters and end with 'abc'.
The file is in this format:
<int><tab><field2>
I've tried a few patterns, some work,... (2 Replies)
Hello All,
I have been using String.h with gcc 2.95. Now I have upgraded to gcc 3.4. The support for String.h has been removed and I believe Regex.h support is also not inbuilt. So I tried to build my own library for String.h. I had to use Regex.h and rx.h for a succesful library compilation.... (0 Replies)
Hi all,
I am looking to create words from a sentence which adhere to a custom search pattern from my website:
Example:
! +! / += ~
where the terms ! = not, +! = AND NOT, += - and equals and ~ = can be like....
Now here is the issue...i want to split a sentence like the one above on... (1 Reply)
Hi,
Can someone tell me why the first regular expression with the + fails to match the input string?
SUN /web>echo cat | grep '+'
SUN /web>echo cat | grep ''
cat
I'm running SunOS 5.10
Thanks.
Chris (2 Replies)
Hi there,
How can we use regex in perl to store the Route Distinguisher (the bold field) and also the underlined and bold lines in the below file?
Note:
These highlighted pattern is redundant through the whole input file. Basically, we just need to extract these fields at least to store them... (4 Replies)
Need some help with a regex if loop problem.
File1:
2323
3232
4230
3230
4340
4343
233
32320
I want to print "Zero" if the number ends with a zero, but print "number" if it does not!
#!/bin/bash
/usr/bin/nawk '{
if ($1 ==/+0\b/){
print "Zero"}
else{
print "number"} (5 Replies)
Hi,
I tried to extract the time from `date` with sed.
(I know it works with `date +%H:%M:%S` as well)
I got three solutions of which just one worked. I thought "+" should repeat the previous expression 1 or more times and {n} should repeat the previous expression n times.
$ date
Thu... (9 Replies)
hi everyone
suppose my input file is
ABC-12345
ABCD-12345
BCD-123456
i want to search the specific pattern which looks like
-
in a file so i used this command
cat $file | awk ' { if ($0 ~ /-/) { print } }'
so it gives me the result as
ABCD-12345
BCD-12345
BCD-12345
... (31 Replies)
Script logs into switches on my list but nothing seems to happen.
Following error:
tr nope, doesn't (yet) match (?-xism:-]+ ?(?:\(config*\))? ? ?$)
du SEEN:
Here is code in question:
@version_info = $session_obj->cmd('term length 0');
$session_obj->cmd('show int | i... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: mrlayance
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
tie::hash::regex
Tie::Hash::Regex(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Tie::Hash::Regex(3pm)NAME
Tie::Hash::Regex - Match hash keys using Regular Expressions
SYNOPSIS
use Tie::Hash::Regex;
my %h;
tie %h, 'Tie::Hash::Regex';
$h{key} = 'value';
$h{key2} = 'another value';
$h{stuff} = 'something else';
print $h{key}; # prints 'value'
print $h{2}; # prints 'another value'
print $h{'^s'}; # prints 'something else'
print tied(%h)->FETCH(k); # prints 'value' and 'another value'
delete $h{k}; # deletes $h{key} and $h{key2};
or (new! improved!)
my $h : Regex;
DESCRIPTION
Someone asked on Perlmonks if a hash could do fuzzy matches on keys - this is the result.
If there's no exact match on the key that you pass to the hash, then the key is treated as a regex and the first matching key is returned.
You can force it to leap straight into the regex checking by passing a qr'ed regex into the hash like this:
my $val = $h{qr/key/};
"exists" and "delete" also do regex matching. In the case of "delete" all vlaues matching your regex key will be deleted from the hash.
One slightly strange thing. Obviously if you give a hash a regex key, then it's possible that more than one key will match (consider
c<$h{qw/./}>). It might be nice to be able to do stuff like:
my @vals = $h{$pat};
to get all matching values back. Unfortuately, Perl knows that a given hash key can only ever return one value and so forces scalar context
on the "FETCH" call when using the tied interface. You can get round this using the slightly less readable:
my @vals = tied(%h)->FETCH($pat);
ATTRIBUTE INTERFACE
From version 0.06, you can use attributes to define your hash as being tied to Tie::Hash::Regex. You'll need to install the module
Attribute::Handlers.
METHODS
FETCH
Get a value from the hash. If there isn't an exact match try a regex match.
EXISTS
See if a key exists in the hash. If there isn't an exact match try a regex match.
DELETE
Delete a key from the hash. If there isn't an exact match try a regex match.
AUTHOR
Dave Cross <dave@mag-sol.com>
Thanks to the Perlmonks <http://www.perlmonks.org> for the original idea and to Jeff "japhy" Pinyan for some useful code suggestions.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2001-8, Magnum Solutions Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
LICENSE
This script is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
SEE ALSO perl(1).
perltie(1).
Tie::RegexpHash(1)perl v5.10.0 2008-06-30 Tie::Hash::Regex(3pm)