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Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Grep multiple words in a file with help of fixed string switch Post 303042046 by RudiC on Thursday 12th of December 2019 06:28:11 AM
Old 12-12-2019
Not with fgrep nor grep -F. man grep:
Quote:
-F, --fixed-strings
Interpret PATTERNS as fixed strings, not regular expressions.
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.
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Alternation
Two regular expressions may be joined by the infix operator |; the resulting regular expression matches any string matching either alternate expression.

You see that fgrep looks for the entire fixed string including the pipe char. Try plain grep instead.
 

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REGEX(3)						     Library Functions Manual							  REGEX(3)

NAME
re_comp, re_exec - regular expression handler SYNOPSIS
char *re_comp(s) char *s; re_exec(s) char *s; DESCRIPTION
Re_comp compiles a string into an internal form suitable for pattern matching. Re_exec checks the argument string against the last string passed to re_comp. Re_comp returns 0 if the string s was compiled successfully; otherwise a string containing an error message is returned. If re_comp is passed 0 or a null string, it returns without changing the currently compiled regular expression. Re_exec returns 1 if the string s matches the last compiled regular expression, 0 if the string s failed to match the last compiled regular expression, and -1 if the compiled regular expression was invalid (indicating an internal error). The strings passed to both re_comp and re_exec may have trailing or embedded newline characters; they are terminated by nulls. The regular expressions recognized are described in the manual entry for ed(1), given the above difference. SEE ALSO
ed(1), ex(1), egrep(1), fgrep(1), grep(1) DIAGNOSTICS
Re_exec returns -1 for an internal error. Re_comp returns one of the following strings if an error occurs: No previous regular expression, Regular expression too long, unmatched (, missing ], too many () pairs, unmatched ). 3rd Berkeley Distribution May 15, 1985 REGEX(3)
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