ref: ccd7f9f1597e56d121e1d05cf6af86f688ef2c48
dir: /man/1/sh-regex/
.TH SH-REGEX 1 .SH NAME re, match \- shell script regular expression handling .SH SYNOPSIS .B load regex .B match .I regex [ .IR arg ... ] .br .B ${re .I op .IR arg... .B } .br .SH DESCRIPTION .I Regex is a loadable module for .IR sh (1) that provides access to regular-expression pattern matching and substitution. For details of regular expression syntax in Inferno, see .IR regexp (6). .I Regex defines one builtin command, .BR match , and one builtin substitution operator, .BR re . .B Match gives a false exit status if its argument .I regex fails to match any .IR arg . .B Re provides several operations, detailed below: .TP 10 \f5${re g\fP \fIregexp\fP \fR[\fP \fIarg\fP\fR...\fP\fR]\fP\f5}\fP Yields a list of each .I arg that matches .IR regexp . .TP \f5${re v\fP \fIregexp\fP \fR[\fP \fIarg\fP\fR...\fP\fR]\fP\f5}\fP Yields a list of each .I arg that does not match .IR regexp . .TP \f5${re m\fP \fIregexp\fP \fIarg\fP\f5}\fP Yields the portion of .I arg that matches .IR regexp , or an empty list if there was no match. .TP \f5${re M\fP \fIregexp\fP \fIarg\fP\f5}\fP Yields a list consisting of the portion of .I arg that matches .IR regexp , followed by list elements giving the portion of .I arg that matched each parenthesized subexpression in turn. .TP \f5${re mg\fP \fIregexp\fP \fIarg\fP\f5}\fP Similar to .B re m except that it applies the match consecutively through .IR arg , yielding a list of all the portions of .I arg that match .IR regexp . If a match is made to the null string, no subsequent substitutions will take place. .TP \f5${re s\fP \fIregexp\fP \fIsubs\fP [ \fIarg\fP... ]\f5}\fP For each .IR arg , .B re s substitutes the first occurrence of .I regexp (if any) by .IR subs . If .I subs contains a sequence of the form .BI \e d where .I d is a single decimal digit, the .IR d th parenthesised subexpression in .I regexp will be substituted in its place. .B \e0 is substituted by the entire match. If any other character follows a backslash .RB ( \e ), that character will be substituted. Arguments which contain no match to .I regexp will be left unchanged. .TP \f5${re sg\fP \fIregexp\fP \fIsubs\fP [ \fIarg\fP... ]\f5}\fP Similar to .B re s except that all matches of .I regexp within each .I arg will be substituted for, rather than just the first match. Only one occurrence of the null string is substituted. .PP .SH EXAMPLES List all files in the current directory that end in .B .dis or .BR .sbl : .EX ls -l ${re g '\e.(sbl|dis)$' *} .EE .PP Break .I string up into its constituent characters, putting the result in shell variable .BR x : .EX x = ${re mg '.|\en' \fIstring\fP} .EE .PP Quote a string .B s so that it can be used as a literal regular expression without worrying about metacharacters: .EX s = ${re sg '[*|[\e\e+.^$()?]' '\e\e\e0' $s} .EE .PP Define a substitution function .B pat2regexp to convert shell-style patterns into equivalent regular expressions (e.g. .RB `` ?.sbl* '' would become .RB `` ^.\e.sbl.*$ ''): .EX load std subfn pat2regexp { result = '^' ^ ${re sg '\e*' '.*' ${re sg '\?' '.' ${re sg '[()+\e\e.^$|]' '\e\e\e0' $*} } } ^ '$' } .EE .SH SOURCE .B /appl/cmd/sh/regex.b .SH SEE ALSO .IR regexp (6), .IR regex (2), .IR sh (1), .IR string (2), .IR sh-std (1)