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Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Grep multiple patterns(file) and replace whole line Post 303036206 by bakunin on Wednesday 19th of June 2019 05:28:00 AM
Old 06-19-2019
Quote:
Originally Posted by wxboo
How to replace them with either the new name or pattern name . The reason i want to replace them is that later i need to count how many patterns had been found. Maybe using
Code:
sort -u | wc

.
I stuck after grep all the matched, but do not know how many patterns had been found.
Code:
less input_file | grep -f pattern_file | ... | sort -u | wc

OK, first: if you want to change something, grep is not the right tool for it. You should use sed. grep is for finding things - but only finding, not changing them.

Second: before you start on a solution you should define your problem correctly. For instance, your sample input file has seven lines, your expected output has 5. Are the two missing lines left on purpose? If yes, say so. If not, how should they be handled? Maybe let unchanged?

So, let us first rephrase your task. I will make some assumptions here which might as well be wrong. Don't hesitate to correct them:

you have an input file containing certain text patterns and a pattern file which you want to apply to the input. When a pattern is matched you want to replace the whole line in the input with a certain marker, which is defined distinctly for each pattern found that way. Lines not matched by any pattern should be deleted from the result set. In a final step you want to count how many markers of each kind are found in the result set.

Is that correct?

I hope this helps.

bakunin
 

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PCREGREP(1)						      General Commands Manual						       PCREGREP(1)

NAME
pcregrep - a grep with Perl-compatible regular expressions. SYNOPSIS
pcregrep [-Vcfhilnrsvx] pattern [file] ... DESCRIPTION
pcregrep searches files for character patterns, in the same way as other grep commands do, but it uses the PCRE regular expression library to support patterns that are compatible with the regular expressions of Perl 5. See pcre(3) for a full description of syntax and semantics. If no files are specified, pcregrep reads the standard input. By default, each line that matches the pattern is copied to the standard out- put, and if there is more than one file, the file name is printed before each line of output. However, there are options that can change how pcregrep behaves. Lines are limited to BUFSIZ characters. BUFSIZ is defined in <stdio.h>. The newline character is removed from the end of each line before it is matched against the pattern. OPTIONS
-V Write the version number of the PCRE library being used to the standard error stream. -c Do not print individual lines; instead just print a count of the number of lines that would otherwise have been printed. If sev- eral files are given, a count is printed for each of them. -ffilename Read patterns from the file, one per line, and match all patterns against each line. There is a maximum of 100 patterns. Trailing white space is removed, and blank lines are ignored. An empty file contains no patterns and therefore matches nothing. -h Suppress printing of filenames when searching multiple files. -i Ignore upper/lower case distinctions during comparisons. -l Instead of printing lines from the files, just print the names of the files containing lines that would have been printed. Each file name is printed once, on a separate line. -n Precede each line by its line number in the file. -r If any file is a directory, recursively scan the files it contains. Without -r a directory is scanned as a normal file. -s Work silently, that is, display nothing except error messages. The exit status indicates whether any matches were found. -v Invert the sense of the match, so that lines which do not match the pattern are now the ones that are found. -x Force the pattern to be anchored (it must start matching at the beginning of the line) and in addition, require it to match the entire line. This is equivalent to having ^ and $ characters at the start and end of each alternative branch in the regular expression. SEE ALSO
pcre(3), Perl 5 documentation DIAGNOSTICS
Exit status is 0 if any matches were found, 1 if no matches were found, and 2 for syntax errors or inacessible files (even if matches were found). AUTHOR
Philip Hazel <ph10@cam.ac.uk> Last updated: 15 August 2001 Copyright (c) 1997-2001 University of Cambridge. PCREGREP(1)
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