2

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.

2
  • This shouldn't have been closed.
    – SArcher
    Feb 4, 2019 at 17:20
  • Answer: Use grep -E '(?!)' or grep -P '(?!)', and make sure to use ' ' or it won't like the !.
    – Andrew
    Aug 10, 2023 at 4:00

3 Answers 3

3

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

1

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
2
  • 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
  • @Bohemian: Thanks good point, I corrected.
    – anubhava
    Oct 7, 2013 at 13:41
0

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.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.