Re: OT: matched string of a regular expression
On Wed, Mar 04, 2009 at 04:24:27PM -0500, kamaraju kusumanchi wrote:
> Consider the following file.
>
> > cat junk.txt
> a(i)1b
> a(j)1b
> a(ij)1b
> a(ji)1b
> a(ijk)1b
> a(jik)1b
> a(ikj)1b
> a(jki)1b
> a(kij)1b
> a(kji)1b
>
> In general the file is very long, might contain some other text. Now,
> I would like to replace all the occurrences of
>
> a(ijk)1b with a(ijk)23b
> a(jik)1b with a(jik)23b
> a(ikj)1b with a(ikj)23b
> and so on for all the strings such as a(???)
>
> Because of the size of the files involved, the number of files on
> which I have to perform this operation I decided to use sed (instead
> of doing it manually in vim)
>
> However my sed script currently involves 6 lines (for all the
> combinations of ijk) such as
>
> s/a(ijk)1b/a(ijk)23b/g
> s/a(jik)1b/a(jik)23b/g
> s/a(ikj)1b/a(ikj)23b/g
> and so on
>
> This method is very cumbersome, not scalable. If I have to do similar
> operations on a(ijklm) the script would be 120 lines! Is there any way
> to write something like
>
> s/a(???)1b/a(???)23b/g
>
> where the second ??? is the string matched by the first regular
> expression.
>
> In general, how can I obtain the string that is matched by a regular
> expression (in a shell script)?
>
> BTW, Is sed the right tool for this kind of job? If not, can you
> suggest any other tool that will get the job done in less time?
Perhaps you could write a script/program to permutate the letters of
the command line argument and then do:
for jim in `permutate`;do sed -i "s/a$jim1b/a$jim23b/";done
I've no idea if this would work. I'd certainly skip the -i option to
start with ;)
>
> PS: Please include my email in the CC.
>
> thanks
> raju
>
>
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