I am testing an application for cataloging and storing conversations in our call center. In particular, I am preparing materials for uploading files to the database. We have many millions of files. Example:
- Audio_25-09-2018 00-08-33 (1).mp3
- Info_25-09-2018 00-08-33 (1).txt
- Audio_25-09-2019 00-20-39 (2).mp3
- Info_25-09-2019 00-20-39 (2).txt
- ...
- Audio_25-09-2020 00-20-39 (1546879).mp3
Files are divided into pairs, recording and transcription of the conversation. I only need to copy the ones that have a couple. Example:
- Audio_25-09-2018 00-08-33 (1).mp3
- Info_25-09-2018 00-08-33 (1).txt
- Audio_25-09-2019 00-20-39 (2).mp3
- Info_25-09-2019 00-20-39 (2).txt
To do this, I want to get two lists and compare them with each other:
- names of transcription files
- filenames of audio recordings
ls -1 *.mp3 | sed -e 's/.[^_\d|\W]+\d?//' > list_mp3
I want to receive text:
- _25-09-2018 00-08-33 (1)
- _25-09-2018 00-20-39 (2)
- _25-09-2018 00-20-39 (3)
But I get:
- Audio_25-09-2018 00-08-33 (1).mp3
- Audio_25-09-2018 00-20-39 (2).mp3
- Audio_25-09-2018 00-20-39 (3).mp3
I checked the expression and it will filter exactly what I need. link to regex101 Why doesn't it work in conjunction with a sed?
sed
that only accepts POSIX patterns. Useperl
with your regex.perl -pe 's/.[^_\d\W]+\d?//' > list_mp3
sed -E 's/^[^_]+|\.[^.]*$//g'
orsed 's/^[^_]*|\.[^.]*$//g'