It will remove trailing whitespace with a single space, but only if it is GNU sed. Regular sed does not understand \t, so then it will remove trailing spaces, backslashes and t's..
Regular sed
Code:
$ printf "%s\n" "Just wait " | sed 's/[ \t]*$/ /'
Just wai
GNU sed:
Code:
$ printf "%s\n" "Just wait " | sed 's/[ \t]*$/ /'
Just wait
Regular sed takes a hard TAB character (you can enter it with CTRL-V TAB)
Code:
printf "%s\t\t\n" "Just wait " | sed 's/[ ]*$/ X/'
Just wait X
In the square brackets are a space and a TAB-character. This is also understood by GNU sed, so for portability use that instead of \t
Last edited by Scrutinizer; 11-24-2014 at 01:14 PM..
Say that I want to match any of the following:
abc
def
ghi
The letters will either be "abc", "def", or "ghi", only those three patterns. The numbers will vary, but there will only be numbers between the brackets.
I've only been able to match abc, using the following:
abc.*.
I'm... (1 Reply)
Hi guys,
Pretty new to regex, and i know im doing something wrong here. I'm trying to get a regex command that restricts a string to be 8 characters long, and the first character cannot be 0. Here's what i have so far...
echo "01234" | grep "^{8}*$"
Thanks very much!
-Crawf
... (7 Replies)
Hi,
Is there any quick way to use pull out keys that match a specific regex pattern?
eg
%hash ;
$hash(123,456) = xxx;
$hash(123,457) = xxx;
$hash(123,458) = xxx;
$hash(223,459) = xxx;
I need a fast way to get all the keys that start with 123..
Meaning I should get
... (5 Replies)
I am having trouble parsing rpm filenames in a shell script.. I found a snippet of perl code that will perform the task but I really don't have time to rewrite the entire script in perl. I cannot for the life of me convert this code into something sed-friendly:
if ($rpm =~ /(*)-(*)-(*)\.(.*)/)... (1 Reply)
Hi,
Please help me to understand the bold segments in the below regex.
Both are of same type whose meaning I am looking for.
find . \( -iregex './\{6,10\}./src' \) -type d -maxdepth 2
Output:
./20111210.0/src
In continuation to above:
sed -e 's|./\(*.\{1,3\}\).*|\1|g'
Output: ... (4 Replies)
I have the following line of code that works wonders. I just don't completely understand it as I am just starting to learn regex. Can you help me understand exactly what is happening here?
find . -type f | grep -v '^\.$' | sed 's!\.\/!!' (4 Replies)
# echo "Teest string" | sed 's/e*/=>replaced=</'
=>replaced<=Teest string
So, in the above code , sed replaces at the start. does that mean sed using the pattern e* settles to zero occurence ? Why sed was not able to replace Teest string.
# echo "Teest string" | sed 's/e*//g'
Tst string
... (6 Replies)
Hi everyone,
This regex looks simple and yet it doesn't make sense how it's manipulating the output.
ifconfig -a
eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:0c:49:c2:35:6v
inet addr:192.16.1.1 Bcast:192.168.226.255 Mask:255.255.255.0
inet6 addr:... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I need some guidance with understanding this Perl script below. I am not the author of the script and the author has not leave any documentation. I supposed it is meant to be 'easy' if you're a Perl or regex guru. I am having problem understanding what regex to use :confused: The script does... (3 Replies)
Hello All,
While googling on regex I came across a site named Regulex Regulex:JavaScript Regular Expression Visualizer
I have written a simple regex ^(a|b|c)(*)@(.*) and could see its visualization; one could export it too, following is the screen shot.
... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: RavinderSingh13
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
paps
PAPS(1) General Commands Manual PAPS(1)NAME
paps - UTF-8 to PostScript converter using Pango
SYNOPSIS
paps [options] files...
DESCRIPTION
paps reads a UTF-8 encoded file and generates a PostScript language rendering of the file. The rendering is done by creating outline curves
through the pango ft2 backend.
OPTIONS
These programs follow the usual GNU command line syntax, with long options starting with two dashes (`-'). A summary of options is
included below.
--landscape
Landscape output. Default is portrait.
--columns=cl
Number of columns output. Default is 1.
Please notice this option isn't related to the terminal length as in a "80 culums terminal".
--font=desc
Set the font description. Default is Monospace 12.
--rtl Do right to left (RTL) layout.
--paper ps
Choose paper size. Known paper sizes are legal, letter and A4. Default is A4.
Postscript points
Each postscript point equals to 1/72 of an inch. 36 points are 1/2 of an inch.
--bottom-margin=bm
Set bottom margin. Default is 36 postscript points.
--top-margin=tm
Set top margin. Default is 36 postscript points.
--left-margin=lm
Set left margin. Default is 36 postscript points.
--right-margin=rm
Set right margin. Default is 36 postscript points.
--gutter-width=gw
Set gutter width. Default is 40 postscript points.
--help Show summary of options.
--header
Draw page header for each page.
--markup
Interpret the text as pango markup.
--lpi Set the lines per inch. This determines the line spacing.
--cpi Set the characters per inch. This is an alternative method of specifying the font size.
--stretch-chars
Indicates that characters should be stretched in the y-direction to fill up their vertical space. This is similar to the texttops
behaviour.
AUTHOR
paps was written by Dov Grobgeld <dov.grobgeld@gmail.com>.
This manual page was written by Lior Kaplan <kaplan@debian.org>, for the Debian project (but may be used by others).
April 17, 2006 PAPS(1)