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Full Discussion: Grep regex filter
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Grep regex filter Post 302887792 by hce on Monday 10th of February 2014 09:57:08 PM
Old 02-10-2014
Quote:
Originally Posted by Scrutinizer
Then try this:
Code:
grep -E 'properties =.*[^[:alnum:]_]compute([^[:alnum:]_]|$)' file

If it does not need to be portable, on some platforms you can also try one of the following:
Code:
grep 'properties =.*[[:<:]]compute[[:>:]]' file
grep 'properties =.*\<compute\>' file
grep 'properties =.*\bcompute\b' file

Terrific, thank you so much.
 

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GREP(1) 						      General Commands Manual							   GREP(1)

NAME
grep - search a file for lines containing a given pattern SYNOPSIS
grep [-elnsv] pattern [file] ... OPTIONS
-e -e pattern is the same as pattern -c Print a count of lines matched -i Ignore case -l Print file names, no lines -n Print line numbers -s Status only, no printed output -v Select lines that do not match EXAMPLES
grep mouse file # Find lines in file containing mouse grep [0-9] file # Print lines containing a digit DESCRIPTION
Grep searches one or more files (by default, stdin) and selects out all the lines that match the pattern. All the regular expressions accepted by ed and mined are allowed. In addition, + can be used instead of * to mean 1 or more occurrences, ? can be used to mean 0 or 1 occurrences, and | can be used between two regular expressions to mean either one of them. Parentheses can be used for grouping. If a match is found, exit status 0 is returned. If no match is found, exit status 1 is returned. If an error is detected, exit status 2 is returned. SEE ALSO
cgrep(1), fgrep(1), sed(1), awk(9). GREP(1)
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