Now - OpenVMS definitely is NOT "almost same to other other operating systems." Refer to their help system (unfortunately it's quite some time so I can't remember the correct syntax) about what options and regexes they accept.
Quote:
Originally Posted by boncuk
. . .
I tried Rudi's command on sun solaris,
. . .
Do you have access to GNU sed on your system?
You could try the -r option, which on several systems is equivalent to -E.
Applied to your a.txt file from post#6 on Ubuntu 18.04:
EDIT: on FreeBSD 9.0-RELEASE, the BRE sed fails, but
This works on my FreeBSD:
hi,
i got a problem with understanding regular expressions. what i wanna do is
scanning the wtmp logfile for ips and if a specific ip is echoed id like to be a part of a text to be assigned to it.
the scanning is done with
#! /bin/bash
cat wtmp | strings | egrep -o "+\.+\.+\." | sort -u... (6 Replies)
I have a simple file test.out that contains data in the form of
key1=A|shift1
key2=B|shift2
key3=C|shift3
and so on.
I need to get it to print
A
B
C
I can do it using lookbehind assertion such as this
( ?<==)()
yet I was wondering if there is another way of mutching single... (8 Replies)
Hi
I have a question on regex
There is a line in a script like
my_file="$(echo SunMonTueWed | sed "s//_&g") "
My question what does the expression _&g do.
Obviously in this example the output is
_Sun_Mon_Tue_Wed
Another question can i use some trick to get the result like... (3 Replies)
Hi, im sure this is really simple but i cant quite figure it out. how do i test against a word at the beginning of the line but up to the point of a delimiter i.e. ":"
for example if i wanted to test against the user in the /etc/passwd file
peter:x:101:100:peters account:/var/peter:/bin/sh
... (3 Replies)
I have a basic question regarding * and . while using regex:
# echo 3 | grep ^*$
3
I think I understood why it outputs "3" here (because '*' matches zero or more of the previous character) but I don't understand the output of the following command:
# echo 3 | grep ^.$
#
I thought I... (7 Replies)
I have dates in mm/dd/yy format that I wish to convert to yy-mm-dd format.
()/()/() finds them, but when I try to replace with $3-$1-$2 both kate and kwrite treat it as a text literal. (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to write a regex for myscript and need some input from experts.
here is what I must grep for
TICKET{Sapce}{Space}{hyphen}
so here is the example data
TICKET 34554, CT-12345, TICKET 12345: some text here
TICKET 2342, CT-12345, MA-12344: some text here
TICKET... (5 Replies)
Hi guys,
I have a file in the following format:
cmpr5551
cmpr6002
cmpr93
anne 5454
bbro 434
cmprsvc
cmprsvc7
ffgi55
vefe99
cmprsvc8
cmprsvc9
I need to "grep" only the entries which start with "cmpr" followed by the number. All other entries should be excluded.
I was trying to use... (3 Replies)
Hi guys,
I am trying to "grep" or "egrep" the following entry out of the file using regex:
MACCDB1 or MACCDB2
The problem is that the file might contain other entries which start with "MACCDB" string.
I was trying to use regex to "grep" the exact pattern but it fails to output the correct... (2 Replies)
Hi I am trying to match lines having following string
BIND dn="uid=
putting something like this is not working :
/\sBIND dn="uid=/
Any suggestion.
Thanks. John (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: john_prince
9 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
xmtextfindstringwcs
XmTextFindStringWcs(library call) XmTextFindStringWcs(library call)
NAME
XmTextFindStringWcs -- A Text function that finds the beginning position of a wide character text string
SYNOPSIS
#include <Xm/Text.h>
Boolean XmTextFindStringWcs(
Widget widget,
XmTextPosition start,
wchar_t *wcstring,
XmTextDirection direction,
XmTextPosition *position);
DESCRIPTION
XmTextFindStringWcs locates the beginning position of a specified wide character text string. This routine searches forward or backward for
the first occurrence of the string, starting from the given start position. If a match is found, the function returns the position of the
first character of the string in position. If the match string begins at the current position, this routine returns the current position.
widget Specifies the Text widget ID.
start Specifies the character position from which the search proceeds. This is an integer number of characters from the beginning of
the text buffer. The first character position is 0 (zero).
wcstring Specifies the wide character search string.
direction Indicates the search direction. It is relative to the primary direction of the text. The possible values are
XmTEXT_FORWARD
The search proceeds toward the end of the buffer.
XmTEXT_BACKWARD
The search proceeds toward the beginning of the buffer.
position Specifies the pointer in which the first character position of the string match is returned. This is an integer number of char-
acters from the beginning of the buffer. The first character position is 0 (zero). If the function returns False, this value is
undefined.
For a complete definition of Text and its associated resources, see XmText(3).
RETURN
Returns True if a string match is found; otherwise, returns False.
RELATED XmText(3) and XmTextFindString(3).
XmTextFindStringWcs(library call)