I need a regex to match using egrep
which checks for a pattern like the following 1_0_5
in a long request string. If we consider the pattern as a_b_c
. I want b to be anything apart from 2, 3, 4 and 13.
3 Answers
This should do it:
grep -P '\b[^_]+_(?!(2|3|4|13)_)[^_]+_[^_]+\b' myfile
If your terms are all digits, refine it to this:
grep -P '\b\d+_(?!(2|3|4|13)_)\d+_\d+\b' myfile
Note the -P
flag to turn on perl comparability, which allows look aheads
egrep doesn't support lookaheads.
You can use grep -P
(PCRE)
grep -P '^[0-9]*_(?!(2|3|4|13)_)[0-9]*_[0-9]*$' file
OR else if above pattern is found in the middle of a string then use word boundaries instead of line start/end anchors:
grep -P '\b[0-9]*_(?!(2|3|4|13)_)[0-9]*_[0-9]*\b' file
-
That would exclude a_22_c - I think the neg look ahead should include the ending underscore. It would also match
a_2_c a_x_c
which would include an unwanted hit– Bohemian ♦Oct 7, 2013 at 13:39 -
For clarity and simplicity:
awk '/a_[^_]+_c/ && !/a_(2|3|4|13)_c/' file
It would help us to help you, though, if you posted some sample input and expected output.
grep -E '(?!)'
orgrep -P '(?!)'
, and make sure to use' '
or it won't like the!
.