I'm looking for a way to match (pseudo code)
grep -E '^[aoueiy]*(!sch|s|z)+.*$'
where !
is no match
It should match sabc
, zabc
and as
, but not usch
.
How can I write this in a proper way with grep?
You can do it in two steps with grep -E
:
grep -E '^[aeiouy]*(s|z)+' infile | grep -vE '^[aeiouy]*(sch)+'
The first pass gets all the desired matches plus the undesired, usch
style matches; the second pass removes the undesired ones.
For an input file containing
sabc
zabc
as
usch
the output is
$ grep -E '^[aeiouy]*(s|z)+' infile | grep -vE '^[aeiouy]*(sch)+'
sabc
zabc
as
Or, building on redneb's answer, using grep -P
1 and a negative look-ahead:
$ grep -P '^[aeiouy]*(?!sch)[sz]+' infile
sabc
zabc
as
1 Notice that the -P
option requires GNU grep.
I'm not sure what you mean by:
grep -E '^[aoueiy]*(!sch|s|z)+.*$'
but whatever it is, just use awk. For example this is one interpretation of what you might mean by the above command:
awk '/^[aoueiy]*[sz]/ && !/^[aoueiy]*sch/'
or with GNU awk for the 3rd arg to match() to remove the redundant specification of ^[aoueiy]*
:
awk 'match($0,/^[aoueiy]*([sz].*)/,a) && (a[1] !~ /^sch/)'
'^[aoueiy]*(!sch|s|z)+[aoueiy]*(!sch|s|z)+.*$'
, it might be too complicated.
Sep 26, 2016 at 0:30
I want it as one expression
I assume you mean one regexp and if so - why? Not everything can/should be expressed as one regexp. That regexp you wrote is NOT the equivalent of the compound condition in the awk statement in my answer. Yes what you want as a single regexp WILL be too complicated and/or only work in some grep
s (e.g. GNU grep for -P
).
Sep 26, 2016 at 15:20
If you use the -P
mode in grep
, then you could use a negative lookahead like so:
grep -P '^[aoueiy]*(?!sch|s|z).*$'
This matches [aoueiy]*
at the beginning of a line provided that it is not followed by one of sch
, s
, z
.
Also note that the .*$
at the end of the regex is redundant, so you can just do:
grep -P '^[aoueiy]*(?!sch|s|z)'
-v
option of grep to invert the search:grep -v 'sch'
?