grep -v


 
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# 1  
Old 02-09-2009
Power grep -v

I have 2 data files:

file1 contains:

A
H
C
B

file2 contains:

H
D
F
I
A
M
O
B
W
C

I want to use grep -v to get:

file3 which will contain:

D
F
I
M
O
W

Any advice?? Thanks!
# 2  
Old 02-09-2009
egrep -v -f file1 file2
# 3  
Old 02-09-2009
Code:
grep -v -ffile1 file2

Code:
$ cat g
A
H
C
B
$ cat gg
H
D
F
I
A
M
O
B
W
C
$ grep -v -fg gg
D
F
I
M
O
W
$

# 4  
Old 02-09-2009
If you are using grep - make sure that you are using the right one... On my Solaris 10 host, I have the following two (VERY) different results:

Code:
bash-3.00# /usr/bin/grep -v -ffile1 file2
/usr/bin/grep: illegal option -- f
/usr/bin/grep: illegal option -- f
/usr/bin/grep: illegal option -- e
/usr/bin/grep: illegal option -- 1
Usage: grep -hblcnsviw pattern file . . .

versus
Code:
bash-3.00# /usr/xpg4/bin/grep -v -ffile1 file2
D
F
I
M
O
W

# 5  
Old 02-09-2009
Good point. I was on our linux server:

Quote:
$ grep --help
Usage: grep [OPTION]... PATTERN [FILE]...
Search for PATTERN in each FILE or standard input.
PATTERN is, by default, a basic regular expression (BRE).
Example: grep -i 'hello world' menu.h main.c

Regexp selection and interpretation:
-E, --extended-regexp PATTERN is an extended regular expression (ERE)
-F, --fixed-strings PATTERN is a set of newline-separated fixed strings
-G, --basic-regexp PATTERN is a basic regular expression (BRE)
-P, --perl-regexp PATTERN is a Perl regular expression
-e, --regexp=PATTERN use PATTERN for matching
-f, --file=FILE obtain PATTERN from FILE
-i, --ignore-case ignore case distinctions
-w, --word-regexp force PATTERN to match only whole words
-x, --line-regexp force PATTERN to match only whole lines
-z, --null-data a data line ends in 0 byte, not newline

Miscellaneous:
-s, --no-messages suppress error messages
-v, --invert-match select non-matching lines
-V, --version print version information and exit
--help display this help and exit
--mmap use memory-mapped input if possible

Output control:
-m, --max-count=NUM stop after NUM matches
-b, --byte-offset print the byte offset with output lines
-n, --line-number print line number with output lines
--line-buffered flush output on every line
-H, --with-filename print the filename for each match
-h, --no-filename suppress the prefixing filename on output
--label=LABEL print LABEL as filename for standard input
-o, --only-matching show only the part of a line matching PATTERN
-q, --quiet, --silent suppress all normal output
--binary-files=TYPE assume that binary files are TYPE;
TYPE is `binary', `text', or `without-match'
-a, --text equivalent to --binary-files=text
-I equivalent to --binary-files=without-match
-d, --directories=ACTION how to handle directories;
ACTION is `read', `recurse', or `skip'
-D, --devices=ACTION how to handle devices, FIFOs and sockets;
ACTION is `read' or `skip'
-R, -r, --recursive equivalent to --directories=recurse
--include=FILE_PATTERN search only files that match FILE_PATTERN
--exclude=FILE_PATTERN skip files and directories matching FILE_PATTERN
--exclude-from=FILE skip files matching any file pattern from FILE
--exclude-dir=PATTERN directories that match PATTERN will be skipped.
-L, --files-without-match print only names of FILEs containing no match
-l, --files-with-matches print only names of FILEs containing matches
-c, --count print only a count of matching lines per FILE
-T, --initial-tab make tabs line up (if needed)
-Z, --null print 0 byte after FILE name

Context control:
-B, --before-context=NUM print NUM lines of leading context
-A, --after-context=NUM print NUM lines of trailing context
-C, --context=NUM print NUM lines of output context
-NUM same as --context=NUM
--color[=WHEN],
--colour[=WHEN] use markers to highlight the matching strings;
WHEN is `always', `never', or `auto'
-U, --binary do not strip CR characters at EOL (MSDOS)
-u, --unix-byte-offsets report offsets as if CRs were not there (MSDOS)

`egrep' means `grep -E'. `fgrep' means `grep -F'.
Direct invocation as either `egrep' or `fgrep' is deprecated.
With no FILE, or when FILE is -, read standard input. If less than two FILEs
are given, assume -h. Exit status is 0 if any line was selected, 1 otherwise;
if any error occurs and -q was not given, the exit status is 2.

Report bugs to <bug-grep@gnu.org>.
.... where egrep has been deprecated.
 
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