I am trying to write my gsub regex to replace a bunch of special characters with spaces, so i can split it to an array and look at each word independently.
However, my regex skills are slightly lacking and I appear to be missing a quote or something here.
I am trying to replace the following characters \/;:'"`()| with a space.
When i run this piece of the code i get the following error.
line 240: syntax error at line 289: `)' unexpected
Hello
I have problem with reg-expr and function gsub();
File that I want to preprocess look like this:
int table ;
printf(" variable : ", variable) ;
Using nawk I try something like this:
for ( .... )
{
line = $0
reg_expr = "\.\=]*" "" variable "" "\.\=]*" ;
gsub( reg_expr... (1 Reply)
Hello,
I have a variable that displays the following results from a JVM....
1602100K->1578435K
I would like to collect the value of 1578435 which is the value after a garbage collection. I've tried the following command but it looks like I can't get the > to work. Any suggestions as... (4 Replies)
I am having trouble parsing rpm filenames in a shell script.. I found a snippet of perl code that will perform the task but I really don't have time to rewrite the entire script in perl. I cannot for the life of me convert this code into something sed-friendly:
if ($rpm =~ /(*)-(*)-(*)\.(.*)/)... (1 Reply)
Hello,
i'm searching for a solution to this problem.
I have 2 files, the first one is like:
<HTML>
<HEAD>
<TITLE>{$String1}</TITLE>
</HEAD>
<BODY>
<P>{$String2}</P>
</BODY>
</HTML>and the other one:
{$String1}; french
{$String2}; italian
{$String3}; english
...
{$StringN};
I... (3 Replies)
Hi, I want to print the first column with original value and without any double quotes
The output should look like
<original column>|<column without quotes>
$ cat a.txt
"20121023","19301229712","100397"
"20121023","19361629712","100778"
"20121030A","19361630412","100838"... (3 Replies)
I have a number of files that I pass through awk/gsub.
I believe to have found a working regex and on 'test bed' sites it matches, however within gsub it does not.
Examples:
Initial data:
/Volumes/Daniel/Public/Drop Box/_Hellsing_Ultimate_OVA_-_10_.mkv
gsub & regex:
gsub("\]+\]",""
... (4 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 LINUX
re_exec
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 3.27 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)