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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting problems egreging for a '(0)' string Post 97923 by m223464 on Friday 3rd of February 2006 10:00:44 AM
Old 02-03-2006
Quote:
Originally Posted by mahendramahendr
Madhan's command works absolutly fine.. here is how it works

$ more tmp1
hai it is the begining
this is test (0) for unix.com
also to test SYSTEM for the same
this is the end of the file

$ egrep '(0)|SYSTEM' tmp1
this is test (0) for unix.com
also to test SYSTEM for the same

can you tell me what was the error you got ?
Whilst you're seeing what you think is the correct output that's because it's actually greping for 0 and SYSTEM

# cat tmp
hai it is the begining
this is test (0) for unix.com
also to test SYSTEM for the same
this is the end of the file
this is test 0 for unix.com

If I want to exclude lines including (0) using your syntax I get the following result:

# egrep -v '(0)|SYSTEM' tmp
hai it is the begining
this is the end of the file

Line 5 should not have been removed if the pattern is (0)
 

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trbsd(1)						      General Commands Manual							  trbsd(1)

NAME
trbsd - Translates characters SYNOPSIS
trbsd [-Acs] string1 string2 trbsd -d [-Ac] string1 The trbsd command copies characters from the standard input to the standard output with substitution or deletion of selected characters. OPTIONS
Translates on a byte-by-byte basis. When you specify this option, trbsd does not support extended characters. Complements (inverts) the set of characters in string1 with respect to the universe of characters whose codes are 001 through 377 octal if you specify -A, and all characters if you do not specify -A. Deletes all characters in string1 from output. Changes characters that are repeated output charac- ters in string2 into single characters. DESCRIPTION
Input characters from string1 are replaced with the corresponding characters in string2. The trbsd command cannot handle an ASCII NUL (00) in string1 or string2; it always deletes NUL from the input. The tr command is a System V compatible version of trbsd. Abbreviations such as a-z, standing for a string of characters whose ASCII codes run from character a to character z, inclusive, can be used to introduce ranges of characters. Note that brackets are not special characters. Use the escape character (backslash) to remove the special meaning from any character in a string. Use the followed by 1, 2, or 3 octal digits for the code of a character. If a given character appears more than once in string1, the character in string2 corresponding to its last appearance in string1 will be used in the translation. EXAMPLES
To translate braces into parentheses, enter: trbsd '{}' '()' <textfile >newfile This translates each { (left brace) to a ( (left parenthesis) and each } (right brace) to a ) (right parenthesis). All other char- acters remain unchanged. To translate lowercase ASCII characters to uppercase, enter: trbsd a-z A-Z <textfile >newfile The two strings can be of different lengths: trbsd 0-9 # <textfile >newfile This translates each digit to a # (number sign); if string2 is too short, it is padded to the length of string1 by duplicating its last character. To translate each string of digits to a single # (number sign), enter: trbsd -s 0-9 # <textfile >newfile To trans- late all ASCII characters that are not specified, enter: trbsd -c ' -~' 'A-_' <textfile >newfile This translates each nonprinting ASCII character to the corresponding control key letter (01 translates to A, 02 to B, and so on). ASCII DEL (177), the character that follows ~ (tilde), translates to a ? (question mark). SEE ALSO
Commands: ed(1), sh(1), tr(1) Files: ascii(5) trbsd(1)
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