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I'm trying to change strings like this:

<a href='../Example/case23.html'><img src='Blablabla.jpg'

To this:

<a href='../Example/case23.html'><img src='<?php imgname('case23'); ?>'

And I've got this monster of a regular expression:

find . -type f | xargs perl -pi -e \
  's/<a href=\'(.\.\.\/Example\/)(case\d\d)(.\.html\'><img src=\')*\'/\1\2\3<\?php imgname\(\'\2\'); \?>\'/'

But it isn't working. In fact, I think it's a problem with Bash, which could probably be pointed out rather quickly.

r: line 4: syntax error near unexpected token `('
r: line 4: `  's/<a href=\'(.\.\.\/Example\/)(case\d\d)(.\.html\'><img src=\')*\'/\1\2\3<\?php imgname\(\'\2\'); \?>\'/''

But if you want to help me with the regular expression that'd be cool, too!

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5 Answers 5

2

Teaching you how to fish:

s/…/…/

Use a separator other than / for the s operator because / already occurs in the expression.

s{…}{…}

Cut down on backslash quoting, prefer [.] over \. because we'll shellquote later. Let's keep backslashes only for the necessary or important parts, namely here the digits character class.

s{<a href='[.][.]/Example/case(\d\d)[.]html'>…

Capture only the variable part. No need to reassemble the string later if the most part is static.

s{<a href='[.][.]/Example/case(\d\d)[.]html'><img src='[^']*'}{<a href='../Example/case$1.html'><img src='<?php imgname('case$1'); ?>'}

Use $1 instead of \1 to denote backreferences. [^']* means everything until the next '.

To serve now as the argument for the Perl -e option, this program needs to be shellquoted. Employ the following helper program, you can also use an alias or shell function instead:

> cat `which shellquote`
#!/usr/bin/env perl
use String::ShellQuote qw(shell_quote); undef $/; print shell_quote <>

Run it and paste the program body, terminate input with Ctrl+d, you receive:

's{<a href='\''[.][.]/Example/case(\d\d)[.]html'\''><img src='\''[^'\'']*'\''}{<a href='\''../Example/case$1.html'\''><img src='\''<?php imgname('\''case$1'\''); ?>'\''}'

Put this together with shell pipeline.

find . -type f | xargs perl -pi -e 's{<a href='\''[.][.]/Example/case(\d\d)[.]html'\''><img src='\''[^'\'']*'\''}{<a href='\''../Example/case$1.html'\''><img src='\''<?php imgname('\''case$1'\''); ?>'\''}'
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  • That's not single quotes permitting escapes. That's "open-quote, close-quote, escape-quote (unquoted/outside of quotes), open-quote, ..." Jul 28, 2010 at 22:39
  • +1 for taking the time to explain in so much detail how to solve this problem step-by-step. Great answer!
    – kander
    Jul 29, 2010 at 17:31
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Bash single-quotes do not permit any escapes.

Try this at a bash prompt and you'll see what I mean:

FOO='\'foo'

will cause it to prompt you looking for the fourth single-quote. If you satisfy it, you'll find FOO's value is

\foo

You'll need to use double-quotes around your expression. Although in truth, your HTML should be using double-quotes in the first place.

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  • Also, as others have said, regular expressions are not the best way to parse HTML. But if your case really is limited to a pattern as relatively simple as this, you can probably get away with it. Jul 28, 2010 at 21:13
  • Downvote: This is wrong, single quotes do permit escapes (see my answer for proof), and therefore double quotes are not needed. Double quotes are very inconvenient anyway, many Perl variables such as $_ or $1 are going to be interpreted as shell variables. To keep one's sanity, always -e'', never -e"".
    – daxim
    Jul 28, 2010 at 21:49
  • @daxim: That's wrong, they don't. See my comment to your answer. Jul 28, 2010 at 22:40
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Single quotes within single quotes in Bash:

set -xv
echo ''"'"''
echo $'\''
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I wouldn't use a one-liner. Put your Perl code in a script, which makes it much easier to get the regex right without wondering about escaping quotes and such.

I'd use a script like this:

#!/usr/bin/perl -pi

use strict;
use warnings;

s{
    ( <a \b [^>]* \b href=['"] [^'"]*/case(\d+)\.html ['"] [^>]* > \s*
      <img \b [^>]* \b src=['"] ) [^'"<] [^'"]*
}{$1<?php imgname('case$2'); ?>}gix;

and then do something like:

find . -type f | xargs fiximgs

– Michael

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if you install the package mysql, it comes with a command called replace.

With the replace command you can:

while read line 
do
 X=`echo $line| replace "<a href='../Example/"  ""|replace ".html'><" " "|awk '{print $1}'`
 echo "<a href='../Example/$X.html'><img src='<?php imgname('$X'); ?>'">NewFile   
done < myfile

same can be done with sed. sed s/'my string'/'replace string'/g.. replace is just easier to work with special characters.

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