I have regular sed on my computer. I am trying to find out a regex for one-four letters.
I have tried
This will match one or four characters, but what if the expression has two characters?
Like AB1234
I don't have GNUsed and am having trouble with this regex.
The opening parenthesis in your RE is not present in the string Like AB1234, so your RE doesn't match this string. If you remove the parenthesis from your RE (as in [A-Z]]{1,4\}), it will match the L or, if used in a global substitute, the L and the AB in Like AB1234.
I would like to do this:
replace the word "prod" with the word "special" but it may occur through the file naturally without a command, I only want it to happen when it has a specific command in front of it. The command will always look like this
<IMG,###,###,##,>prod/directory/IMG/file
... (4 Replies)
From my understanding when using regex1|regex2 the matching process tries each alternative in turn, from left to right, and the first one that succeeds is used.
When im trying to extract the name from those examples:
A) name.can.be.different.20.03.2009.boom
B)... (2 Replies)
Hello everyone I tell you that I'm trying to do a bash program that can put parentheses around each capital letter of each line using SED.
I tell you probe with:
sed -e '1,$s/A/(A)/g' "$file"
but only add parentheses in A.
then tested with:
sed 'y/AB/(A)(B)/' "$archivo"
but it... (3 Replies)
I am having trouble parsing rpm filenames in a shell script.. I found a snippet of perl code that will perform the task but I really don't have time to rewrite the entire script in perl. I cannot for the life of me convert this code into something sed-friendly:
if ($rpm =~ /(*)-(*)-(*)\.(.*)/)... (1 Reply)
If I have a set of strings,
C21
F231
H42
1C10
1F113
and I want to isolate the ints following the char, what would the sed string be to find numbers after letters?
If I do,
*, I will get numbers after letters, but I am looking to do something like,
sed 's/*/\t*/g'
this will give me... (14 Replies)
Hello all. I am a beginner UNIX user who is using UNIX to work on a bioinformatics project for my university.
I have a bit of a complicated issue in trying to use sed (or awk) to "find and replace" bases (letters) in a genetics data spreadsheet (converted to a text file, can be either... (3 Replies)
I have a file with hundreds of lines in it. I wanted to extract anything that matches the following:
KR followed by 4 digits:
example KR1201
cat list | sed "s///g"
Is the closest I've come, and obviously it is not what I want. This would remove all of the items that I want and leave me... (2 Replies)
I am using the following sed script to remove new lines (\r\n and \n), except from lines starting with >:
sed -i ':a /^>/!N;s/\r\n\(\)/\1/;s/\n\(\)/\1/;ta'
Is there a way to include both \r\n and \n in one regex to avoid the second substitute script (s/\n\(\)/\1/)? (4 Replies)