Chapter 9. Pattern Matching
A number of Linux
text editing utilities let you search for
(and, in some cases, change) text patterns rather than fixed strings.
These utilities include the editing programs ed, ex,
vi, and sed, the gawk
scripting language, and the commands grep and egrep. Text patterns (also called
regular expressions) contain normal characters mixed
with special characters (also called
metacharacters).
Perl's regular expression support is so rich that it
does not fit into this book; you can find a description in the
O'Reilly books Mastering Regular
Expressions, Perl in a Nutshell,
Perl 5 Pocket Reference, or
Programming Perl. The Emacs editor also provides
regular expressions similar to those shown in this chapter.
ed and ex are hardly ever used as standalone,
interactive editors nowadays. But ed
can be found as a batch processor invoked from shell scripts, and
ex commands are often invoked within
vi through the colon (:) command. We
use vi in this chapter to refer to
the regular expression features supported by both vi and the ex
editor on which it is based. sed and gawk are widely used in shell scripts and
elsewhere as filters to alter text.
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