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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Find pattern in first field of file Post 302957959 by cjcox on Saturday 17th of October 2015 01:23:27 AM
Old 10-17-2015
How about:

Code:
#!/bin/sh

#awkcode=`sed 's,\(.*\),$1 ~ /\1/ { print $0 },' <Pattern.txt`
awkcode=`sed 's,\(.*\),$1 ~ /@\1$/ { print $0 },' <Pattern.txt`

awk "
$awkcode
" <Content.txt

Notice my awkcode line assumes the pattern to match is preceded by @ and must match to end of field. Take a look at the commented out awkcode line if it should match just on the name regardless of where located.

Using the commented out one, the following lines would match for Masters:

Code:
8@XXXXXXXX@Masters @@@@ blah masters
8@XXXXXXXX@McMasters @@@@ blah mcmasters

Warning, my quickie solution assumes that the Patterns are pretty simple and do not contain weird characters that might mess up awk.
This User Gave Thanks to cjcox For This Post:
 

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XML::LibXML::Pattern(3pm)				User Contributed Perl Documentation				 XML::LibXML::Pattern(3pm)

NAME
XML::LibXML::Pattern - XML::LibXML::Pattern - interface to libxml2 XPath patterns SYNOPSIS
use XML::LibXML; my $pattern = XML::LibXML::Pattern->new('/x:html/x:body//x:div', { 'x' => 'http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml' }); # test a match on an XML::LibXML::Node $node if ($pattern->matchesNode($node)) { ... } # or on an XML::LibXML::Reader if ($reader->matchesPattern($pattern)) { ... } # or skip reading all nodes that do not match print $reader->nodePath while $reader->nextPatternMatch($pattern); $pattern = XML::LibXML::Pattern->new( pattern, { prefix => namespace_URI, ... } ); $bool = $pattern->matchesNode($node); DESCRIPTION
This is a perl interface to libxml2's pattern matching support http://xmlsoft.org/html/libxml-pattern.html. This feature requires recent versions of libxml2. Patterns are a small subset of XPath language, which is limited to (disjunctions of) location paths involving the child and descendant axes in abbreviated form as described by the extended BNF given below: Selector ::= Path ( '|' Path )* Path ::= ('.//' | '//' | '/' )? Step ( '/' Step )* Step ::= '.' | NameTest NameTest ::= QName | '*' | NCName ':' '*' For readability, whitespace may be used in selector XPath expressions even though not explicitly allowed by the grammar: whitespace may be freely added within patterns before or after any token, where token ::= '.' | '/' | '//' | '|' | NameTest Note that no predicates or attribute tests are allowed. Patterns are particularly useful for stream parsing provided via the "XML::LibXML::Reader" interface. new() $pattern = XML::LibXML::Pattern->new( pattern, { prefix => namespace_URI, ... } ); The constructor of a pattern takes a pattern expression (as described by the BNF grammar above) and an optional HASH reference mapping prefixes to namespace URIs. The method returns a compiled pattern object. Note that if the document has a default namespace, it must still be given an prefix in order to be matched (as demanded by the XPath 1.0 specification). For example, to match an element "<a xmlns="http://foo.bar"</a>", one should use a pattern like this: $pattern = XML::LibXML::Pattern->new( 'foo:a', { foo => 'http://foo.bar' }); matchesNode($node) $bool = $pattern->matchesNode($node); Given an XML::LibXML::Node object, returns a true value if the node is matched by the compiled pattern expression. SEE ALSO
XML::LibXML::Reader for other methods involving compiled patterns. AUTHORS
Matt Sergeant, Christian Glahn, Petr Pajas VERSION
2.0001 COPYRIGHT
2001-2007, AxKit.com Ltd. 2002-2006, Christian Glahn. 2006-2009, Petr Pajas. perl v5.14.2 2012-06-20 XML::LibXML::Pattern(3pm)
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