3

I have a text file, which lists file names in a directory (excerpt below). The item names are the f followed 3-digit numbers.

 771M Jan 22 02:35 f186
 1.2G Jan 22 02:35 f172
 771M Jan 22 02:36 f206
 771M Jan 22 02:37 f151
 771M Jan 22 02:37 f029
 1.2G Jan 22 02:38 f162
 771M Jan 22 02:40 f168
 1.2G Jan 22 02:42 f244
...

I would like to have a list of only the 3-digit numbers. Therefore, I need to repalce the previous columns by "nothing". Since the content of the previous columns is different for each line, I would use an asterisk, and the following approach seemed logic for me in VIM:

:%s/*f/

where I replace everything followed by an f by nothing.

Why doesn't this work? How do I do this in VIM?

1
  • 1
    Didn't know it existed. Good point!
    – ouranos
    Jul 18, 2019 at 15:23

1 Answer 1

8

Vim uses regex and, in regex, an asterisk is actually a quantifier.

What you want is this:

:%s/.*f/

the . character means any character, and the * means any number of .s. So, the combination .* matches essentially anything, which is what you were looking for.

Regexes are simultaneously the most useful and annoying things I have ever learned, so I would recommend getting familiar with them.

1

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.