When the pattern you're trying to replace contains slash (/) characters, you have to use something other than slash as the delimiter in the sed substitute command or escape all of the slash characters in the pattern. For this example, you could try using the pipe symbol (|) as the delimiter:
This User Gave Thanks to Don Cragun For This Post:
Hi,
I have got an application through which an user will submit an address like "c:\tuser\abc".
This application calls a script and passes the address to the scripts positional parameter say $1.
So $1 should contain "c:\tuser\abc", but when $1 is echoed the "\t" and "\a" are interpreted to... (4 Replies)
Hi,
Is it possible to view the escape sequence in the ascii file. That is I want to see the newlinw character,tab ........ etc
Thanks
Sweta (4 Replies)
I couldn't seem to make 'HOME' key work on my remote windows ssh client to a Fedora Core3 server (the home key works perfectly when i'm physically on site.)
To my surprise, using control+V it seems that both my home and insert key send the same escape sequence ^So it must be my windows SSH client... (0 Replies)
Hi all,
I have a requirement where the variable name starts with $, like
$Amd=/home/student/test/
How to work wit it? can some one help me, am in gr8 confusion:confused: (5 Replies)
Hi All,
I have added the script command to user profile so that to record the on-screen data.But when i i checked the O/P i could see lot of escape sequence is there way to remove it. (2 Replies)
Is there any i can achieve entity escaping, URL escaping & UTF-8 encoded for the xml generated through shell script?
#! /bin/bash
echo "<path>" >> file.xml
for x in `ls filename*`
do
echo -e "\t<dir>" >> file.xml
echo -e "\t\t<file>$x</file>" >> file.xml... (0 Replies)
$table is the variable which contains name of the file.
Filename may have the special character $. Need to escape $ .
Tried below options to escape dollar:
\$$table
"\$"$table""
what is the escape sequence for egrep function..?
Below is the code snippet-
my $table;
foreach... (3 Replies)
I ran the following grep and sed command.
grep "\t" emp.txt
sed -n '/\t/p' emp.txt
grep treated the '\' as to escape t and took the pattern as literal t whereas sed took the pattern as tab.
That means , grep doesn't understand escape sequence!!!!!!
what to do to make grep... (8 Replies)
Friends,
In the file i am having more then 100 lines like,
File1 had the values like this:
#Example East.server_01=EAST.SERVER_01
East.server_01=EAST.SERVER_01
West.server_01=WEST.SERVER_01
File2 had the values like this:
#Example EAST.SERVER_01=http://yahoo.com... (3 Replies)
Having a doubt on how Function keys are mapped.
1. In my HPUX box my infocmp shows that kf1 (F1 key mapping) is not mapped. But somehow I am able to use an Informix form which requires navigation using F1 keys.
vt100-w|vt100-w-am|dec vt100 132 cols (w/advanced video),
bce, bw, ccc,... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: clemansy
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
fnmatch
FNMATCH(3) Linux Programmer's Manual FNMATCH(3)NAME
fnmatch - match filename or pathname
SYNOPSIS
#include <fnmatch.h>
int fnmatch(const char *pattern, const char *string, int flags);
DESCRIPTION
The fnmatch() function checks whether the string argument matches the pattern argument, which is a shell wildcard pattern.
The flags argument modifies the behavior; it is the bitwise OR of zero or more of the following flags:
FNM_NOESCAPE
If this flag is set, treat backslash as an ordinary character, instead of an escape character.
FNM_PATHNAME
If this flag is set, match a slash in string only with a slash in pattern and not by an asterisk (*) or a question mark (?)
metacharacter, nor by a bracket expression ([]) containing a slash.
FNM_PERIOD
If this flag is set, a leading period in string has to be matched exactly by a period in pattern. A period is considered to be
leading if it is the first character in string, or if both FNM_PATHNAME is set and the period immediately follows a slash.
FNM_FILE_NAME
This is a GNU synonym for FNM_PATHNAME.
FNM_LEADING_DIR
If this flag (a GNU extension) is set, the pattern is considered to be matched if it matches an initial segment of string which is
followed by a slash. This flag is mainly for the internal use of glibc and is only implemented in certain cases.
FNM_CASEFOLD
If this flag (a GNU extension) is set, the pattern is matched case-insensitively.
RETURN VALUE
Zero if string matches pattern, FNM_NOMATCH if there is no match or another nonzero value if there is an error.
CONFORMING TO
POSIX.2. The FNM_FILE_NAME, FNM_LEADING_DIR, and FNM_CASEFOLD flags are GNU extensions.
SEE ALSO sh(1), glob(3), scandir(3), wordexp(3), glob(7)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 2000-10-15 FNMATCH(3)