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I have a html file where some of them are "minified", this means that a whole website can be in just one line.

I want to filter the value of ?idsite= which contains numbers. So a html contains something like this: img src="//stats.domains.com/piwik.php?idsite=44.

So the plain output should be "44".

I tried grep but it echos the whole line and just highlights the value.

5
  • How about using sed? Feb 18, 2015 at 2:02
  • Is there more then one occurrence of ?idsite= and can you provide the URL so we can see the full page? Feb 18, 2015 at 2:07
  • the string is just one time in the html file. my file is under a .htaccess protection but you can see a snippet of the code on the piwik website: piwik.org/docs/tracking-api under 'image tracker code' Feb 18, 2015 at 2:12
  • Putting the snippet from the page you reference in a file called idsite.html and substituting 44 for for the [$IDSITE] in the parameter, this bit of perl will extract the "44": perl -nE 'say /.*idsite=(..).*$\"/ if /idsite/ ' idsite.html
    – G. Cito
    Feb 18, 2015 at 2:52
  • possible duplicate of sed command to extract text from HTML Feb 18, 2015 at 7:41

4 Answers 4

0

With perl it could be something like:

 echo "Whole bunch of stuff  \                                        
  img src=\"stats.domains.com/piwik.php?idsite=44\" " \
  | perl -nE 'say /.*idsite=(..)\"/ '

(assumes that idsite is always two characters ! :-). Your regex will need to be more sophisticated than this most likely).

Putting the snippet from the page you reference above in an HTML file (non-minified) and subsituting 44 for the parameter variable, this bit of perl will extract the "44":

 perl -nE 'say /.*idsite=(..)/ if /idsite/ ' idsite.html

Translating the one liner to a sed command line would be similar:

echo "Whole bunch of stuff  \                                        
 img src=\"stats.domains.com/piwik.php?idsite=44\" " \
 | sed -En "s/^.*idsite=(..)\"/\1/p"

This is POSIXsed from FreeBSD (should work on OSX) the -E switch is to add "modern" regexes.

Doing it in awk is left as an exercise for another community member :-)

2
  • ok this works perfect if the characters are 2 digits and the html is minified. but i tried this one on a non-minified html, and it doesnt work on this. Feb 18, 2015 at 2:38
  • If the HTML is not minified and idsite=44 is followed by other characters or parameters you could try to simply match 2 characters (..). You could probably filter the lines a bit: perl -nE 'say /.*idsite=(..)/ if /idsite/ ' index.html might work. A bit of a quick hack though. I guess if you're going to use perl you might as well use a module to parse the tags .. sorry :-D
    – G. Cito
    Feb 18, 2015 at 3:00
0

Here is a perl way to extract only the trailing digits of strings like src="//stats.domains.com/piwik.php?idsite=44" and run on a bash command line:

echo $src|perl -ne '$_ =~m /(\d+$)/; print $1'

Here is a python way to do the same thing:

import re
print ', '.join( re.findall(r'\d+$', src))

If there will be a lot of src strings to process, it would be best to compile the regex when using Python as follows:

import re
p = re.compile('\d+$')
print ', '.join(p.findall(src))

The import and the compilation only have to be done once.

Here is a Ruby way to do it:

puts src.scan( /\d+$/ ).first

In all cases the regexes end with "$" which matches the end of the string. That is why they match and extract only digits (\d+) at the end of the string.

0

If you don't need to check whether the idsite is in the value of a src attribute, then all you need is

perl -nE'say $1 if /\bidsite=(\d+)' myfile.html
0
$ cat site.html
lorem ipsum idsite='4934' fasdf a
other line

$ sed -n  '/idsite/ { s/.*idsite=\([0-9]\+\).*$/\1/; p }' < site.html
4934

Let me know in case you need an explanation of what is going on.

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