3

Stack Overflow already has some great posts about counting occurrences of a string (eg. "foo"), like this one: count all occurrences of string in lots of files with grep. However, I've been unable to find an answer to a slightly more involved variant.

Let's say I want to count how many instances of "foo:[*whatever*]*whatever else*" exist in a folder; I'd do:

grep -or 'foo:[(.*)]' * | wc -l

and I'd get back "55" (or whatever the count is). But what if I have a file like:

foo:bar abcd
foo:baz efgh
not relevant line
foo:bar xyz

and I want to get count how many instances of foo:bar vs. how many of foo:bazs, etc.? In other words, I'd like output that's something like:

bar 2
baz 1

I assume there's some way to chain greps, or use a different command from wc, but I have no idea what it is ... any shell scripting experts out there have any suggestions?

P.S. I realize that if I knew the set of possible sub-strings (ie. if I knew there was only "foo:bar" and "foo:baz") this would be simpler, but unfortunately there set of "things that can come after foo:" is unknown.

1 Answer 1

7

You could use sort and uniq -c:

$ grep -orE 'foo:(.*)' * | sort | uniq -c
      2 foo:bar
      1 foo:baz
4
  • That's awesome, thank you! ... except I'm afraid I over-generalized in my original question. There's also potentially (irrelevant) text after the grepped text, and that text would muck up the uniq I think? I've tried to edit the question to be clearer. May 3, 2013 at 21:15
  • @machineghost -o should give you only the actually matched text. Use a pattern other than .* if the matched portion is too much.
    – Gumbo
    May 3, 2013 at 21:17
  • @machineghost Yes, try something like \S+ (one or more non-whitespace characters) instead of .*.
    – Gumbo
    May 3, 2013 at 21:18
  • Got it (in my actual case I had a closing paren as the boundary, so I wound up doing foo\([^)]+\)). May 3, 2013 at 21:20

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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