When used with
grep
or
egrep
, regular expressions are surrounded by quotes. (If the pattern contains a $, you must use single quotes; e.g.,
'
pattern
'
.) When used with ed, ex, sed, and awk, regular expressions are usually surrounded by / (although any delimiter works). Here are some example patterns:
Pattern | What does it match? |
---|---|
bag | The string bag . |
^bag | bag at beginning of line. |
bag$ | bag at end of line. |
^bag$ | bag as the only word on line. |
[Bb]ag | Bag or bag . |
b[aeiou]g | Second letter is a vowel. |
b[^aeiou]g | Second letter is a consonant (or uppercase or symbol). |
b.g | Second letter is any character. |
^...$ | Any line containing exactly three characters. |
^\. | Any line that begins with a dot. |
^\.[a-z][a-z] | Same, followed by two lowercase letters (e.g., troff requests). |
^\.[a-z]\{2\} |
Same as previous,
grep
or sed only. |
^[^.] | Any line that doesn't begin with a dot. |
bugs* | bug , bugs , bugss , etc. |
"word" | A word in quotes. |
"*word"* | A word, with or without quotes. |
[A-Z][A-Z]* | One or more uppercase letters. |
[A-Z]+ |
Same,
egrep
or awk only. |
[A-Z].* | An uppercase letter, followed by zero or more characters. |
[A-Z]* | Zero or more uppercase letters. |
[a-zA-Z] | Any letter. |
[^0-9A-Za-z] | Any symbol (not a letter or a number). |
egrep or awk pattern | What does it match? |
---|---|
[567] | One of the numbers 5 , 6 , or 7 . |
five|six|seven | One of the words five , six , or seven . |
80[23]?86 | 8086 , 80286 , or 80386 |
compan(y|ies) | company or companies |
ex or vi pattern | What does it match? |
---|---|
\<the | Words like theater or the . |
the\> | Words like breathe or the . |
\<the\> | The word the . |
sed or grep pattern | What does it match? |
---|---|
0\{5,\} | Five or more zeros in a row. |
[0-9]\{3\}-[0-9]\{2\}-[0-9]\{4\} | Social security number ( nnn - nn - nnnn ). |
The following examples show the metacharacters available to sed or ex. Note that ex commands begin with a colon. A space is marked by a ; a tab is marked by
tab
.
Command | Result |
---|---|
s/.*/( & )/ | Redo the entire line, but add parentheses. |
s/.*/mv & &.old/ |
Change a wordlist (one word per line) into
mv
commands. |
/^$/d | Delete blank lines. |
:g/^$/d | Same as previous, in ex editor. |
/^[![]()
tab
]*$/d |
Delete blank lines, plus lines containing spaces or tabs. |
:g/^[![]()
tab
]*$/d |
Same as previous, in ex editor. |
s/![]() ![]() ![]() |
Turn one or more spaces into one space. |
%s/![]() ![]() ![]() |
Same as previous, in ex editor. |
:s/[0-9]/Item &:/ | Turn a number into an item label (on the current line). |
:s | Repeat the substitution on the first occurrence. |
:& | Same as previous. |
:sg | Same, but for all occurrences on the line. |
:&g | Same as previous. |
:%&g | Repeat the substitution globally. |
:.,$s/Fortran/\U&/g | Change word to uppercase, on current line to last line. |
:%s/.*/\L&/ | Lowercase entire file. |
:s/\<./\u&/g | Uppercase first letter of each word on current line. (Useful for titles.) |
:%s/yes/No/g | Globally change a word to No . |
:%s/Yes/~/g | Globally change a different word to No (previous replacement). |
Finally, some sed examples for transposing words. A simple transposition of two words might look like this:
s/die or do/do or die/ Transpose words.
The real trick is to use hold buffers to transpose variable patterns. For example:
s/\([Dd]ie\) or \([Dd]o\)/\2 or \1/ Transpose, using hold buffers.