2

This one is driving me crazy. Trying to do a command-line search/replace with perl. Essentially I want to strip out all file paths that don't end in XLS(X), but they have to start with the string NATIVE. Thanks in advance!

Command

cat test.txt | perl -ne 's/"(?!NATIVE[^"]+XLSX?)"/""/g; print;'

test.txt

"Blah","NATIVE/001/FOO.XLS","Blah"
"Blah","NATIVE/001/BAR.XLSX","Blah"
"Blah","NATIVE/001/FOO.DOC","Blah"
"Blah","NATIVE/001/FOO.PPT","Blah"
"Blah","NATIVE/001/FOO.PPTX","Blah"
"Blah","NATIVE/001/FOO.PNG","Blah"

Expected Output

"Blah","NATIVE/001/FOO.XLS","Blah"
"Blah","NATIVE/001/BAR.XLSX","Blah"
"Blah","","Blah"
"Blah","","Blah"
"Blah","","Blah"
"Blah","","Blah"

Actual Output

"Blah","NATIVE/001/FOO.XLS","Blah"
"Blah","NATIVE/001/BAR.XLSX","Blah"
"Blah","NATIVE/001/FOO.DOC","Blah"
"Blah","NATIVE/001/FOO.PPT","Blah"
"Blah","NATIVE/001/FOO.PPTX","Blah"
"Blah","NATIVE/001/FOO.PNG","Blah"

5 Answers 5

1

You can try this pattern with lookbehinds:

cat test.txt | perl -ne 's/"NATIVE\/[^"]+(?<!\.XLS)(?<!\.XLSX)"/""/g; print;'

or

cat test.txt | perl -ne 's/"NATIVE\/[^"]++(?<!\.XLS)(?<!\.XLSX)/"/g; print;'

You need to be sure that the lookbehinds start just before the closing quote. To do that, you have two ways: writing the closing quote or using a possessive quantifier.

1
  • There it is! Looks like the [^"]+ captured everything to the end of the field and my lookAHEAD wasn't matching because of it. Thank you!!
    – eric
    May 20, 2014 at 3:17
1

You want to use a Negative Lookbehind here instead.

cat test.txt | perl -ne 's/"NATIVE[^"]+(?<!\.XLS|XLSX)"/""/g; print;'

You could also use Lookahead and Lookbehind for the quotes also.

cat test.txt | perl -ne 's/(?<=")NATIVE[^"]+(?<!\.XLS|XLSX)(?=")//g; print;'

Output

"Blah","NATIVE/001/FOO.XLS","Blah"
"Blah","NATIVE/001/BAR.XLSX","Blah"
"Blah","","Blah"
"Blah","","Blah"
"Blah","","Blah"
"Blah","","Blah"
1

Using a perl one-liner

perl -pe 's/"NATIVE[^"]+(?<!\.XLSX)(?<!\.XLS)"/""/g;' test.txt

Basically, use a negative lookbehind assertion. And because they can't be variable length, just use two.

Note, if assertions are too challenging sometimes, you can break up your logic using the /e modifier. The following also would work and simply does the replacement conditionally in two steps:

perl -pe 's/"\K(NATIVE[^"]+)/$1 =~ m{XLSX?$} ? $1 : ""/eg;' test.txt
0

here is my attempt pattern (?<=")NATIVE[^.]*\.(?!\XLSX?")[^"]+
Demo

0

No need for lookbehind:

cat test.txt | perl -ne 's/"NATIVE(?![^"]+XLSX?")[^"]*"/""/g; print;'

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