Although I am almost sure this has been covered, I can't seem to find anything specific to this. As I continue my journey on learning bash I keep finding parts where I am baffled as to why things happen the way they do.
Searching and replacing or just matching sub-strings in strings is most likely one of the first thing you do when writing scripts. But, trying to stick to one single language or set of tools is difficult to do in bash, as you are able to solve most problem in multiple ways. I am doing my best to stay as low level as possible with bash. I have run into a snag that I need someone to explain to me.
Doing sub-string a search in bash with match gives me different results depending on the regular expression I use, and I am not sure why.
#!/bin/bash
Stext="Hallo World"
echo `expr "$Stext" : '^\(.[a-z]*\)'` # Hallo
echo `expr "$Stext" : '.*World'` # 11
Although both search for a word, I think, both don't return what they find. Why?
expr
is not bash functionality at all -- it's an external tool that isn't part of the shell. Consequently, its behavior is not guaranteed to be consistent on a given version of bash when installed on different platforms, beyond the minimal guarantees provided by the POSIX sh standard (guarantees which don't promise any regex syntax beyond BRE). Also, being external means it's far slower to execute, requiring afork()
to kick off a subshell and anexec()
to replace that shell with an external executable.expr
being an external tool, you are echoing the results of calling the command in a subshell, making it doubly inefficient. These calls should be unwrapped, e.g.expr "$Stext" : '^\(.[a-z]*\)'
. (see superuser.com/questions/1352850/… for a thorough explanation)