Information Technology Ch. 10

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what a regular expression represents

A string of binary characters, represented in a collection of strings (more specifically, a string that combines literal characters, such as 1 or 0, with metacharacters, symbols that represent outputs). An output of strings will be given that match the pattern

[[:alpha:]]

Alphabetic-upper or lower case

metacharacters: [[:class:]]

An alternative form of [ ] where the :class: can be one of several categories such as alpha (alphabetic), digit, alnum (alphabetic or numeric), punct, space, upper, lower

[[:punct:]]

Any punctuation character

[[:graph:]]

Any visible character

[[:print:]]

Any visible character plus the space

[[:space:]]

Any whitespace (tab, return key, space, backspace)

Bash wildcard: [[:class:]]

As with regular expressions, matches any character in the specified class

ls *[[:upper:]]*

FOO, FOO11.txt, FOO1.dat, FOO.txt,/FOO4

ls *[[:upper:]]*.txt

FOO1.txt, FOO.txt

Escape character: \b

Match a word boundary

Escape character: \w

Match any letter (a-zA-Z) or digit

Escape character: \D

Match any non-digit

Escape character: \W

Match any non-letter/non-digit

Escape character: \S

Match any non-white space

Escape character: \B

Match any non-word boundary

Escape character: \s

Match any white space

metacharacters: [^...]

Match if the expression does not contain any characters in [ ]

metacharacters: ^

Match if this expression begins a string

Bash wildcard: **

Matches all files and directories

Bash wildcard: []

Matches any of the enclosed characters, ranges are permitted when using a hyphen, if the first character after the [ is either a - or a ^, it matches any character that is not enclosed in the brackets.

Bash wildcard: @

Matches any one of the listed patterns

Bash wildcard: ?

Matches any single character (note: does not match 0 characters)

Bash wildcard: *

Matches any string, including the null string

Bash wildcard: !

Matches anything except one of the list patterns

Bash wildcard: */

Matches directories

Bash wildcard: +

Matches one or more occurrences (similar to regular expressions)

metacharacters: ( )

The items in .. are treated as a group, match the entire sequence.

grep option: -e regex

The regular expression is placed after -e rather than where it normally is positioned in the instruction; this is used to protect the regular expression if it starts with an unusual character, for instance, the hypen

Bash wildcard: \

Used to escape the meaning of the given character (similar to regular expressions)

grep option: -d read

Used to handle all files of a given directory, use recurse in place of read to read all files of a given directory, and recursively for all subdirectories

ls *

Will list all items in directory

ls *.{dat,txt}

Will list all items in directory ending in either .txt or .dat

ls *[[:digit:]]*

Will list every item that contains a digit

[[:alnum:]]

alphanumeric- letter or digit

[[:cntrl:]]

any control character

grep

command that searches one or more text files for strings that match a given regular expression

grep option: -c

count the number of matches and output the total, do not output any matches found

[[:digit:]]

digit

ls foo[0-2].*

foo1.txt, foo2.dat

ls foo[[:digit:]].*

foo1.txt, foo2.dat, (it does not list foo11.txt because we are only seeking 1 digit, and it does not list foo5?.txt because we do not provide for the ? after the digit and before the period)

ls *\?.*

foo5?.txt

how grep/egrep works

grep pattern filename(s) you should use ``

[[:xdigit:]]

hexadecimal digit

grep option: -i

ignore case (e.g. [a-z] would match any letter whether upper or lower case)

grep option: -v

invert the match, that is, print all lines that do not match the given regular expression

ls *.txt

items returned: foo.txt, foo1.txt, foo11.txt, FOO.txt, FOO11.txt, foo5?.txt

ls *.*

items returned: foo.txt, foo1.txt, foo2.dat, foo11.txt, FOO.txt, FOO1.dat, FOO11.txt, foo5?.txt

ls foo?.*

items returned: foo1.txt, foo2.dat

ls foo??.*

items returned: foo11.txt, foo5?.txt

[[:lower:]]

lower case letter

how to use regular expressions in a long list of files

ls -l * | egrep '*'

Escape character: \d

match any digit

metacharacters: |

match any of these strings (OR)

metacharacters: []

match if the expression contains any of the characters in []

metacharacters: {n,}

match if the string contains at least n occurrences of the preceding character

metacharacters: {n,m}

match if the string contains between n and m consecutive occurrences of the preceding character

metacharacters: {n}

match if the string contains n consecutive occurrences of the previous character

metacharacters: {,m}

match if the string contains no more than m consecutive occurrences of the preceding character

metacharacters: .

match if this expression begins a string

metacharacters: [char-char]

match if this expression contains any characters in the range from char to char (ex. 1-9, a-z, A-Z)

metacharacters: $

match if this expression ends a string

metacharacters: ?

match the preceding character if it appears 0 or 1 time

metacharacters: *

match the preceding character if it appears 0 or more times

metacharacters: +

match the preceding character if it appears 1 or more times

grep option: -o

only output the portion of the line that matches the regular expression

grep option: -L

output any filenames with no matches, do not output matches

grep option: -n

output line numbers

grep option: -a

process a binary file as if it were a text file (this lets you search binary files for specific strings of binary numbers)

grep option: -R, -r

recursive search (same as -d recurse)

[[:blank:]]

space or tab

grep option: -m NUM

stop reading a file after NUM matches

grep option: -h

suppress filename from the output

metacharacters: \

the next character should be interpreted literally, used to escape the meaning of a metacharacter, for instance \$ means "match a $"

[[:upper:]]

upper-case digit

grep option: -E

use egrep (allow the extended expression set)


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