I have this script script.sh
:
#!/bin/bash
file_path=$1
result=$(grep -Po 'value="\K.*?(?=")' $file_path)
echo $result
and this file text.txt
:
value="a"
value="b"
value="c"
When I run ./script.sh /file/directory/text.txt
command, the output in the terminal is the following:
a b c
I understand what the script does, but I don't understand HOW it works, so I need a detailed explanation of this part of command:
-Po 'value="\K.*?(?=")'
If I understood correctly, \K
is a Perl command. Can you give me an alternative in shell (for example with awk
command)?
Thank you in advance.
man grep
, and looking for-P
and-o
? The description of-P
is actually likely to make the rest rather obvious.$file_path
actually means you've got some bugs -- passing a filename that's in a directory namedMy Documents
would go badly. Always quote your expansions:"$file_path"