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Full Discussion: Help match the exact string
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Help match the exact string Post 302946663 by yanglei_fage on Thursday 11th of June 2015 06:08:42 AM
Old 06-11-2015
Quote:
Originally Posted by Don Cragun
You showed us two examples of code you had written that apparently did not do what you want. RavinderSingh13 suggested some code that strips off leading whitespace characters and prints lines that match your requested string after doing that. And, you just repeated your original, ambiguous statement about what you want.

What output were you expecting from the input you supplied? Were you expecting the lines RavinderSingh13's code extracted? Were you expecting no lines to be matched (due to leading or trailing whitespace that is not in the string binutils1_test)? Were you expecting every line that contained that string to be printed?
I expect the line that contains binutils1_test to be print, which maybe contains space or tab, I don't care
 

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UNIQ(1) 						      General Commands Manual							   UNIQ(1)

NAME
uniq - report repeated lines in a file SYNOPSIS
uniq [ -udc [ +n ] [ -n ] ] [ input [ output ] ] DESCRIPTION
Uniq reads the input file comparing adjacent lines. In the normal case, the second and succeeding copies of repeated lines are removed; the remainder is written on the output file. Note that repeated lines must be adjacent in order to be found; see sort(1). If the -u flag is used, just the lines that are not repeated in the original file are output. The -d option specifies that one copy of just the repeated lines is to be written. The normal mode output is the union of the -u and -d mode outputs. The -c option supersedes -u and -d and generates an output report in default style but with each line preceded by a count of the number of times it occurred. The n arguments specify skipping an initial portion of each line in the comparison: -n The first n fields together with any blanks before each are ignored. A field is defined as a string of non-space, non-tab charac- ters separated by tabs and spaces from its neighbors. +n The first n characters are ignored. Fields are skipped before characters. SEE ALSO
sort(1), comm(1) 7th Edition April 29, 1985 UNIQ(1)
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