Unix regex get only the first match - regex

I have the following text:
NodeMetaData MapNodeId="105141" PageFormat="OsXml" UniqueIdentifier="fd0f9ade-88e1-4b04-b338-0a8884f66423" RelativePath="Test_03/AddressMap_MyAddressMap.os.xml" LastPulledRevision="-9223372036854775808" LastPulledMd5="" LastSyncedMd5="7D0C294B9A7C09F17FD5AC0414179DD414649455297B8F73125D7FB5E39D647D" HasMergeConflicts="false"
NodeMetaData MapNodeId="105142" Pag
eFormat="OsXml" UniqueIdentifier="85f55c40-f95c-47f2-9c97-d35881e8f762" RelativePath="Test_03/Struct_MyStruct.os.xml" LastPulledRevision="-922337203685477580
8" LastPulledMd5="" LastSyncedMd5="32364BCCBCD8AA9C47D8E09A3EB06667DD9476EB155F9411FA359EFA5C1A4F4F" HasMergeConflicts="false"
There are two MapNodeId (see bold) and I need to get only the first one and insert it to a file.
I used the following:
set WorkingCopyRI=`( sed -n 's/.*MapNodeId=\"// ; s/\" .*//p' Result.log)`
but the var contains the the id of both MapNodeId, what do I need to add in order to get only the first one?

You can append ;T;q to your script to make it quit after the second s instruction prints for the first time.
Here's a cleaner and more robust way to do the whole thing:
sed -n '/MapNodeId=/ { s/^.*\sMapNodeId="\([^"]*\)"\s .*$/\1/p; q }'
I'm assuming your ID-s won't contain double quotes -- if they can, you will have to modify the expression in group #1.
(Also, your formatting gives no clue as to whether your text occurs in multiple lines or not, but I'm assuming that the MapNodeId="..." parts appear on separate lines, otherwise you wouldn't have this problem.)

perl approach:
perl -ne 'print "$1\n" if /MapNodeId="([^"]+)"/' Result.log
The output:
105141
print "$1\n" - print the first captured group value
Or if you have grep PCRE support:
grep -Po '.*MapNodeId="\K([^"]+)' Result.log | head -n 1

Related

How to use 'sed' to add dynamic prefix to each number in integer list?

How can I use sed to add a dynamic prefix to each number in an integer list?
For example:
I have a string "A-1,2,3,4,5", I want to transform it to string "A-1,A-2,A-3,A-4,A-5" - which means I want to add prefix of first integer i.e. "A-" to each number of the list.
If I have string like "B-1,20,300" then I want to transform it to string "B-1,B-20,B-300".
I am not able to use RegEx Capturing Groups because for global match they do not retain their value in subsequent matches.
When it comes to looping constructs in sed, I like to use newlines as markers for the places I have yet to process. This makes matching much simpler, and I know they're not in the input because my input is a text line.
For example:
$ echo A-1,2,3,4,5 | sed 's/,/\n/g;:a s/^\([^0-9]*\)\([^\n]*\)\n/\1\2,\1/; ta'
A-1,A-2,A-3,A-4,A-5
This works as follows:
s/,/\n/g # replace all commas with newlines (insert markers)
:a # label for looping
s/^\([^0-9]*\)\([^\n]*\)\n/\1\2,\1/ # replace the next marker with a comma followed
# by the prefix
ta # loop unless there's nothing more to do.
The approach is similar to #potong's, but I find the regex much more readable -- \([^0-9]*\) captures the prefix, \([^\n]*\) captures everything up to the next marker (i.e. everything that's already been processed), and then it's just a matter of reassembling it in the substitution.
Don't use sed, just use the other standard UNIX text manipulation tool, awk:
$ echo 'A-1,2,3,4,5' | awk '{p=substr($0,1,2); gsub(/,/,"&"p)}1'
A-1,A-2,A-3,A-4,A-5
$ echo 'B-1,20,300' | awk '{p=substr($0,1,2); gsub(/,/,"&"p)}1'
B-1,B-20,B-300
This might work for you (GNU sed):
sed -E ':a;s/^((([^-]+-)[^,]+,)+)([0-9])/\1\3\4/;ta' file
Uses pattern matching and a loop to replace a number following a comma by the first column prefix and that number.
Assuming this is for shell scripting, you can do so with 2 seds:
set string = "A1,2,3,4,5"
set prefix = `echo $string | sed 's/^\([A-Z]\).*/\1/'`
echo $string | sed 's/,\([0-9]\)/,'$prefix'-\1/g'
Output is
A1,A-2,A-3,A-4,A-5
With
set string = "B-1,20,300"
Output is
B-1,B-20,B-300
Could you please try following(if ok with awk).
awk '
BEGIN{
FS=OFS=","
}
{
for(i=1;i<=NF;i++){
if($i !~ /^A/&&$i !~ /\"A/){
$i="A-"$i
}
}
}
1' Input_file
if your data in 'd' file, tried on gnu sed:
sed -E 'h;s/^(\w-).+/\1/;x;G;:s s/,([0-9]+)(.*\n(.+))/,\3\1\2/;ts; s/\n.+//' d

Advanced `uniq` with "unique part regex"

uniq is a tool that enables once to filter lines in a file such that only unique lines are shown. uniq has some support to specify when two lines are "equivalent", but the options are limited.
I'm looking for a tool/extension on uniq that allows one to enter a regex. If the captured group is the same for two lines, then the two lines are considered "equivalent". Only the "first match" is returned for each equivalence class.
Example:
file.dat:
foo!bar!baz
!baz!quix
!bar!foobar
ID!baz!
Using grep -P '(!\w+!)' -o, one can extract the "unique parts":
!bar!
!baz!
!bar!
!baz!
This means that the first line is considered to be "equivalent" with the third and the second with the fourth. Thus only the first and the second are printed (the third and fourth are ignored).
Then uniq '(!\w+!)' < file.dat should return:
foo!bar!baz
!baz!quix
Not using uniq but using gnu-awk you can get the results you want:
awk -v re='![[:alnum:]]+!' 'match($0, re, a) && !(a[0] in p) {p[a[0]]; print}' file
foo!bar!baz
!baz!quix
Passing required regex using a command line variable -v re=...
match function matches regex for each line and returns matched text in [a]
Every time match succeeds we store matched text in an associative array p and print
Thus effectively getting uniq function with regex support
Here's a simple Perl script that will do the work:
#!/usr/bin/env perl
use strict;
use warnings;
my $re = qr($ARGV[0]);
my %matches;
while(<STDIN>) {
next if $_ !~ $re;
print if !$matches{$1};
$matches{$1} = 1;
}
Usage:
$ ./uniq.pl '(!\w+!)' < file.dat
foo!bar!baz
!baz!quix
Here, I've used $1 to match on the first extracted group, but you can replace it with $& to use the whole pattern match.
This script will filter out lines that don't match the regex, but you can adjust it if you need a different behavior.
You can do this with just grep and sort
DATAFILE=file.dat
for match in $(grep -P '(!\w+!)' -o "$DATAFILE" | sort -u); do
grep -m1 "$match" "$DATAFILE";
done
Outputs:
foo!bar!baz
!baz!quix

In GNU Grep or another standard bash command, is it possible to get a resultset from regex?

Consider the following:
var="text more text and yet more text"
echo $var | egrep "yet more (text)"
It should be possible to get the result of the regex as the string: text
However, I don't see any way to do this in bash with grep or its siblings at the moment.
In perl, php or similar regex engines:
$output = preg_match('/yet more (text)/', 'text more text yet more text');
$output[1] == "text";
Edit: To elaborate why I can't just multiple-regex, in the end I will have a regex with multiple of these (Pictured below) so I need to be able to get all of them. This also eliminates the option of using lookahead/lookbehind (As they are all variable length)
egrep -i "([0-9]+) +$USER +([0-9]+).+?(/tmp/Flash[0-9a-z]+) "
Example input as requested, straight from lsof (Replace $USER with "j" for this input data):
npviewer. 17875 j 11u REG 8,8 59737848 524264 /tmp/FlashXXu8pvMg (deleted)
npviewer. 17875 j 17u REG 8,8 16037387 524273 /tmp/FlashXXIBH29F (deleted)
The end goal is to cp /proc/$var1/fd/$var2 ~/$var3 for every line, which ends up "Downloading" flash files (Flash used to store in /tmp but they drm'd it up)
So far I've got:
#!/bin/bash
regex="([0-9]+) +j +([0-9]+).+?/tmp/(Flash[0-9a-zA-Z]+)"
echo "npviewer. 17875 j 11u REG 8,8 59737848 524264 /tmp/FlashXXYOvS8S (deleted)" |
sed -r -n -e " s%^.*?$regex.*?\$%\1 \2 \3%p " |
while read -a array
do
echo /proc/${array[0]}/fd/${array[1]} ~/${array[2]}
done
It cuts off the first digits of the first value to return, and I'm not familiar enough with sed to see what's wrong.
End result for downloading flash 10.2+ videos (Including, perhaps, encrypted ones):
#!/bin/bash
lsof | grep "/tmp/Flash" | sed -r -n -e " s%^.+? ([0-9]+) +$USER +([0-9]+).+?/tmp/(Flash[0-9a-zA-Z]+).*?\$%\1 \2 \3%p " |
while read -a array
do
cp /proc/${array[0]}/fd/${array[1]} ~/${array[2]}
done
Edit: look at my other answer for a simpler bash-only solution.
So, here the solution using sed to fetch the right groups and split them up. You later still have to use bash to read them. (And in this way it only works if the groups themselves do not contain any spaces - otherwise we had to use another divider character and patch read by setting $IFS to this value.)
#!/bin/bash
USER=j
regex=" ([0-9]+) +$USER +([0-9]+).+(/tmp/Flash[0-9a-zA-Z]+) "
sed -r -n -e " s%^.*$regex.*\$%\1 \2 \3%p " |
while read -a array
do
cp /proc/${array[0]}/fd/${array[1]} ~/${array[2]}
done
Note that I had to adapt your last regex group to allow uppercase letters, and added a space at the beginning to be sure to capture the whole block of numbers. Alternatively here a \b (word limit) would have worked, too.
Ah, I forget mentioning that you should pipe the text to this script, like this:
./grep-result.sh < grep-result-test.txt
(provided your files are named like this). Instead you can add a < grep-result-test after the sed call (before the |), or prepend the line with cat grep-result-test.txt |.
How does it work?
sed -r -n calls sed in extended-regexp-mode, and without printing anything automatically.
-e " s%^.*$regex.*\$%\1 \2 \3%p " gives the sed program, which consists of a single s command.
I'm using % instead of the normal / as parameter separator, since / appears inside the regex and I don't want to escape it.
The regex to search is prefixed by ^.* and suffixed by .*$ to grab the whole line (and avoid printing parts of the rest of the line).
Note that this .* grabs greedy, so we have to insert a space into our regexp to avoid it grabbing the start of the first digit group too.
The replacement text contains of the three parenthesed groups, separated by spaces.
the p flag at the end of the command says to print out the pattern space after replacement. Since we grabbed the whole line, the pattern space consists of only the replacement text.
So, the output of sed for your example input is this:
5 11 /tmp/FlashXXu8pvMg
5 17 /tmp/FlashXXIBH29F
This is much more friendly for reuse, obviously.
Now we pipe this output as input to the while loop.
read -a array reads a line from standard input (which is the output from sed, due to our pipe), splits it into words (at spaces, tabs and newlines), and puts the words into an array variable.
We could also have written read var1 var2 var3 instead (preferably using better variable names), then the first two words would be put to $var1 and $var2, with $var3 getting the rest.
If read succeeded reading a line (i.e. not end-of-file), the body of the loop is executed:
${array[0]} is expanded to the first element of the array and similarly.
When the input ends, the loop ends, too.
This isn't possible using grep or another tool called from a shell prompt/script because a child process can't modify the environment of its parent process. If you're using bash 3.0 or better, then you can use in-process regular expressions. The syntax is perl-ish (=~) and the match groups are available via $BASH_REMATCH[x], where x is the match group.
After creating my sed-solution, I also wanted to try the pure-bash approach suggested by Mark. It works quite fine, for me.
#!/bin/bash
USER=j
regex=" ([0-9]+) +$USER +([0-9]+).+(/tmp/Flash[0-9a-zA-Z]+) "
while read
do
if [[ $REPLY =~ $regex ]]
then
echo cp /proc/${BASH_REMATCH[1]}/fd/${BASH_REMATCH[2]} ~/${BASH_REMATCH[3]}
fi
done
(If you upvote this, you should think about also upvoting Marks answer, since it is essentially his idea.)
The same as before: pipe the text to be filtered to this script.
How does it work?
As said by Mark, the [[ ... ]] special conditional construct supports the binary operator =~, which interprets his right operand (after parameter expansion) as a extended regular expression (just as we want), and matches the left operand against this. (We have again added a space at front to avoid matching only the last digit.)
When the regex matches, the [[ ... ]] returns 0 (= true), and also puts the parts matched by the individual groups (and the whole expression) into the array variable BASH_REMATCH.
Thus, when the regex matches, we enter the then block, and execute the commands there.
Here again ${BASH_REMATCH[1]} is an array-access to an element of the array, which corresponds to the first matched group. ([0] would be the whole string.)
Another note: Both my scripts accept multi-line input and work on every line which matches. Non-matching lines are simply ignored. If you are inputting only one line, you don't need the loop, a simple if read ; then ... or even read && [[ $REPLY =~ $regex ]] && ... would be enough.
echo "$var" | pcregrep -o "(?<=yet more )text"
Well, for your simple example, you can do this:
var="text more text and yet more text"
echo $var | grep -e "yet more text" | grep -o "text"

How do I remove duplicate characters and keep the unique one only in Perl?

How do I remove duplicate characters and keep the unique one only.
For example, my input is:
EFUAHUU
UUUEUUUUH
UJUJHHACDEFUCU
Expected output is:
EFUAH
UEH
UJHACDEF
I came across perl -pe's/$1//g while/(.).*\/' which is wonderful but it is removing even the single occurrence of the character in output.
This can be done using positive lookahead :
perl -pe 's/(.)(?=.*?\1)//g' FILE_NAME
The regex used is: (.)(?=.*?\1)
. : to match any char.
first () : remember the matched
single char.
(?=...) : +ve lookahead
.*? : to match anything in between
\1 : the remembered match.
(.)(?=.*?\1) : match and remember
any char only if it appears again
later in the string.
s/// : Perl way of doing the
substitution.
g: to do the substitution
globally...that is don't stop after
first substitution.
s/(.)(?=.*?\1)//g : this will
delete a char from the input string
only if that char appears again later
in the string.
This will not maintain the order of the char in the input because for every unique char in the input string, we retain its last occurrence and not the first.
To keep the relative order intact we can do what KennyTM tells in one of the comments:
reverse the input line
do the substitution as before
reverse the result before printing
The Perl one line for this is:
perl -ne '$_=reverse;s/(.)(?=.*?\1)//g;print scalar reverse;' FILE_NAME
Since we are doing print manually after reversal, we don't use the -p flag but use the -n flag.
I'm not sure if this is the best one-liner to do this. I welcome others to edit this answer if they have a better alternative.
if Perl is not a must, you can also use awk. here's a fun benchmark on the Perl one liners posted against awk. awk is 10+ seconds faster for a file with 3million++ lines
$ wc -l <file2
3210220
$ time awk 'BEGIN{FS=""}{delete _;for(i=1;i<=NF;i++){if(!_[$i]++) printf $i};print""}' file2 >/dev/null
real 1m1.761s
user 0m58.565s
sys 0m1.568s
$ time perl -n -e '%seen=();' -e 'for (split //) {print unless $seen{$_}++;}' file2 > /dev/null
real 1m32.123s
user 1m23.623s
sys 0m3.450s
$ time perl -ne '$_=reverse;s/(.)(?=.*?\1)//g;print scalar reverse;' file2 >/dev/null
real 1m17.818s
user 1m10.611s
sys 0m2.557s
$ time perl -ne'my%s;print grep!$s{$_}++,split//' file2 >/dev/null
real 1m20.347s
user 1m13.069s
sys 0m2.896s
perl -ne'my%s;print grep!$s{$_}++,split//'
Here is a solution, that I think should work faster than the lookahead one, but is not regexp-based and uses hashtable.
perl -n -e '%seen=();' -e 'for (split //) {print unless $seen{$_}++;}'
It splits every line into characters and prints only the first appearance by counting appearances inside %seen hashtable
Tie::IxHash is a good module to store hash order (but may be slow, you will need to benchmark if speed is important). Example with tests:
use Test::More 0.88;
use Tie::IxHash;
sub dedupe {
my $str=shift;
my $hash=Tie::IxHash->new(map { $_ => 1} split //,$str);
return join('',$hash->Keys);
}
{
my $str='EFUAHUU';
is(dedupe($str),'EFUAH');
}
{
my $str='EFUAHHUU';
is(dedupe($str),'EFUAH');
}
{
my $str='UJUJHHACDEFUCU';
is(dedupe($str),'UJHACDEF');
}
done_testing();
Use uniq from List::MoreUtils:
perl -MList::MoreUtils=uniq -ne 'print uniq split ""'
If the set of characters that can be encountered is restricted, e.g. only letters, then the easiest solution will be with tr
perl -p -e 'tr/a-zA-Z/a-zA-Z/s'
It will replace all the letters by themselves, leaving other characters unaffected and /s modifier will squeeze repeated occurrences of the same character (after replacement), thus removing duplicates
Me bad - it removes only adjoining appearances. Disregard
This looks like a classic application of positive lookbehind, but unfortunately perl doesn't support that. In fact, doing this (matching the preceding text of a character in a string with a full regex whose length is indeterminable) can only be done with .NET regex classes, I think.
However, positive lookahead supports full regexes, so all you need to do is reverse the string, apply positive lookahead (like unicornaddict said):
perl -pe 's/(.)(?=.*?\1)//g'
And reverse it back, because without the reverse that'll only keep the duplicate character at the last place in a line.
MASSIVE EDIT
I've been spending the last half an hour on this, and this looks like this works, without the reversing.
perl -pe 's/\G$1//g while (/(.).*(?=\1)/g)' FILE_NAME
I don't know whether to be proud or horrified. I'm basically doing the positive looakahead, then substituting on the string with \G specified - which makes the regex engine start its matching from the last place matched (internally represented by the pos() variable).
With test input like this:
aabbbcbbccbabb
EFAUUUUH
ABCBBBBD
DEEEFEGGH
AABBCC
The output is like this:
abc
EFAUH
ABCD
DEFGH
ABC
I think it's working...
Explanation - Okay, in case my explanation last time wasn't clear enough - the lookahead will go and stop at the last match of a duplicate variable [in the code you can do a print pos(); inside the loop to check] and the s/\G//g will remove it [you don't need the /g really]. So within the loop, the substitution will continue removing until all such duplicates are zapped. Of course, this might be a little too processor intensive for your tastes... but so are most of the regex-based solutions you'll see. The reversing/lookahead method will probably be more efficient than this, though.
From the shell, this works:
sed -e 's/$/<EOL>/ ; s/./&\n/g' test.txt | uniq | sed -e :a -e '$!N; s/\n//; ta ; s/<EOL>/\n/g'
In words: mark every linebreak with a <EOL> string, then put every character on a line of its own, then use uniq to remove duplicate lines, then strip out all the linebreaks, then put back linebreaks instead of the <EOL> markers.
I found the -e :a -e '$!N; s/\n//; ta part in a forum post and I don't understand the seperate -e :a part, or the $!N part, so if anyone can explain those, I'd be grateful.
Hmm, that one does only consecutive duplicates; to eliminate all duplicates you could do this:
cat test.txt | while read line ; do echo $line | sed -e 's/./&\n/g' | sort | uniq | sed -e :a -e '$!N; s/\n//; ta' ; done
That puts the characters in each line in alphabetical order though.
use strict;
use warnings;
my ($uniq, $seq, #result);
$uniq ='';
sub uniq {
$seq = shift;
for (split'',$seq) {
$uniq .=$_ unless $uniq =~ /$_/;
}
push #result,$uniq;
$uniq='';
}
while(<DATA>){
uniq($_);
}
print #result;
__DATA__
EFUAHUU
UUUEUUUUH
UJUJHHACDEFUCU
The output:
EFUAH
UEH
UJHACDEF
for a file containing the data you list named foo.txt
python -c "print set(open('foo.txt').read())"

how to use sed, awk, or gawk to print only what is matched?

I see lots of examples and man pages on how to do things like search-and-replace using sed, awk, or gawk.
But in my case, I have a regular expression that I want to run against a text file to extract a specific value. I don't want to do search-and-replace. This is being called from bash. Let's use an example:
Example regular expression:
.*abc([0-9]+)xyz.*
Example input file:
a
b
c
abc12345xyz
a
b
c
As simple as this sounds, I cannot figure out how to call sed/awk/gawk correctly. What I was hoping to do, is from within my bash script have:
myvalue=$( sed <...something...> input.txt )
Things I've tried include:
sed -e 's/.*([0-9]).*/\\1/g' example.txt # extracts the entire input file
sed -n 's/.*([0-9]).*/\\1/g' example.txt # extracts nothing
My sed (Mac OS X) didn't work with +. I tried * instead and I added p tag for printing match:
sed -n 's/^.*abc\([0-9]*\)xyz.*$/\1/p' example.txt
For matching at least one numeric character without +, I would use:
sed -n 's/^.*abc\([0-9][0-9]*\)xyz.*$/\1/p' example.txt
You can use sed to do this
sed -rn 's/.*abc([0-9]+)xyz.*/\1/gp'
-n don't print the resulting line
-r this makes it so you don't have the escape the capture group parens().
\1 the capture group match
/g global match
/p print the result
I wrote a tool for myself that makes this easier
rip 'abc(\d+)xyz' '$1'
I use perl to make this easier for myself. e.g.
perl -ne 'print $1 if /.*abc([0-9]+)xyz.*/'
This runs Perl, the -n option instructs Perl to read in one line at a time from STDIN and execute the code. The -e option specifies the instruction to run.
The instruction runs a regexp on the line read, and if it matches prints out the contents of the first set of bracks ($1).
You can do this will multiple file names on the end also. e.g.
perl -ne 'print $1 if /.*abc([0-9]+)xyz.*/' example1.txt example2.txt
If your version of grep supports it you could use the -o option to print only the portion of any line that matches your regexp.
If not then here's the best sed I could come up with:
sed -e '/[0-9]/!d' -e 's/^[^0-9]*//' -e 's/[^0-9]*$//'
... which deletes/skips with no digits and, for the remaining lines, removes all leading and trailing non-digit characters. (I'm only guessing that your intention is to extract the number from each line that contains one).
The problem with something like:
sed -e 's/.*\([0-9]*\).*/&/'
.... or
sed -e 's/.*\([0-9]*\).*/\1/'
... is that sed only supports "greedy" match ... so the first .* will match the rest of the line. Unless we can use a negated character class to achieve a non-greedy match ... or a version of sed with Perl-compatible or other extensions to its regexes, we can't extract a precise pattern match from with the pattern space (a line).
You can use awk with match() to access the captured group:
$ awk 'match($0, /abc([0-9]+)xyz/, matches) {print matches[1]}' file
12345
This tries to match the pattern abc[0-9]+xyz. If it does so, it stores its slices in the array matches, whose first item is the block [0-9]+. Since match() returns the character position, or index, of where that substring begins (1, if it starts at the beginning of string), it triggers the print action.
With grep you can use a look-behind and look-ahead:
$ grep -oP '(?<=abc)[0-9]+(?=xyz)' file
12345
$ grep -oP 'abc\K[0-9]+(?=xyz)' file
12345
This checks the pattern [0-9]+ when it occurs within abc and xyz and just prints the digits.
perl is the cleanest syntax, but if you don't have perl (not always there, I understand), then the only way to use gawk and components of a regex is to use the gensub feature.
gawk '/abc[0-9]+xyz/ { print gensub(/.*([0-9]+).*/,"\\1","g"); }' < file
output of the sample input file will be
12345
Note: gensub replaces the entire regex (between the //), so you need to put the .* before and after the ([0-9]+) to get rid of text before and after the number in the substitution.
If you want to select lines then strip out the bits you don't want:
egrep 'abc[0-9]+xyz' inputFile | sed -e 's/^.*abc//' -e 's/xyz.*$//'
It basically selects the lines you want with egrep and then uses sed to strip off the bits before and after the number.
You can see this in action here:
pax> echo 'a
b
c
abc12345xyz
a
b
c' | egrep 'abc[0-9]+xyz' | sed -e 's/^.*abc//' -e 's/xyz.*$//'
12345
pax>
Update: obviously if you actual situation is more complex, the REs will need to me modified. For example if you always had a single number buried within zero or more non-numerics at the start and end:
egrep '[^0-9]*[0-9]+[^0-9]*$' inputFile | sed -e 's/^[^0-9]*//' -e 's/[^0-9]*$//'
The OP's case doesn't specify that there can be multiple matches on a single line, but for the Google traffic, I'll add an example for that too.
Since the OP's need is to extract a group from a pattern, using grep -o will require 2 passes. But, I still find this the most intuitive way to get the job done.
$ cat > example.txt <<TXT
a
b
c
abc12345xyz
a
abc23451xyz asdf abc34512xyz
c
TXT
$ cat example.txt | grep -oE 'abc([0-9]+)xyz'
abc12345xyz
abc23451xyz
abc34512xyz
$ cat example.txt | grep -oE 'abc([0-9]+)xyz' | grep -oE '[0-9]+'
12345
23451
34512
Since processor time is basically free but human readability is priceless, I tend to refactor my code based on the question, "a year from now, what am I going to think this does?" In fact, for code that I intend to share publicly or with my team, I'll even open man grep to figure out what the long options are and substitute those. Like so: grep --only-matching --extended-regexp
why even need match group
gawk/mawk/mawk2 'BEGIN{ FS="(^.*abc|xyz.*$)" } ($2 ~ /^[0-9]+$/) {print $2}'
Let FS collect away both ends of the line.
If $2, the leftover not swallowed by FS, doesn't contain non-numeric characters, that's your answer to print out.
If you're extra cautious, confirm length of $1 and $3 both being zero.
** edited answer after realizing zero length $2 will trip up my previous solution
there's a standard piece of code from awk channel called "FindAllMatches" but it's still very manual, literally, just long loops of while(), match(), substr(), more substr(), then rinse and repeat.
If you're looking for ideas on how to obtain just the matched pieces, but upon a complex regex that matches multiple times each line, or none at all, try this :
mawk/mawk2/gawk 'BEGIN { srand(); for(x = 0; x < 128; x++ ) {
alnumstr = sprintf("%s%c", alnumstr , x)
};
gsub(/[^[:alnum:]_=]+|[AEIOUaeiou]+/, "", alnumstr)
# resulting str should be 44-chars long :
# all digits, non-vowels, equal sign =, and underscore _
x = 10; do { nonceFS = nonceFS substr(alnumstr, 1 + int(44*rand()), 1)
} while ( --x ); # you can pick any level of precision you need.
# 10 chars randomly among the set is approx. 54-bits
#
# i prefer this set over all ASCII being these
# just about never require escaping
# feel free to skip the _ or = or r/t/b/v/f/0 if you're concerned.
#
# now you've made a random nonce that can be
# inserted right in the middle of just about ANYTHING
# -- ASCII, Unicode, binary data -- (1) which will always fully
# print out, (2) has extremely low chance of actually
# appearing inside any real word data, and (3) even lower chance
# it accidentally alters the meaning of the underlying data.
# (so intentionally leaving them in there and
# passing it along unix pipes remains quite harmless)
#
# this is essentially the lazy man's approach to making nonces
# that kinda-sorta have some resemblance to base64
# encoded, without having to write such a module (unless u have
# one for awk handy)
regex1 = (..); # build whatever regex you want here
FS = OFS = nonceFS;
} $0 ~ regex1 {
gsub(regex1, nonceFS "&" nonceFS); $0 = $0;
# now you've essentially replicated what gawk patsplit( ) does,
# or gawk's split(..., seps) tracking 2 arrays one for the data
# in between, and one for the seps.
#
# via this method, that can all be done upon the entire $0,
# without any of the hassle (and slow downs) of
# reading from associatively-hashed arrays,
#
# simply print out all your even numbered columns
# those will be the parts of "just the match"
if you also run another OFS = ""; $1 = $1; , now instead of needing 4-argument split() or patsplit(), both of which being gawk specific to see what the regex seps were, now the entire $0's fields are in data1-sep1-data2-sep2-.... pattern, ..... all while $0 will look EXACTLY the same as when you first read in the line. a straight up print will be byte-for-byte identical to immediately printing upon reading.
Once i tested it to the extreme using a regex that represents valid UTF8 characters on this. Took maybe 30 seconds or so for mawk2 to process a 167MB text file with plenty of CJK unicode all over, all read in at once into $0, and crank this split logic, resulting in NF of around 175,000,000, and each field being 1-single character of either ASCII or multi-byte UTF8 Unicode.
you can do it with the shell
while read -r line
do
case "$line" in
*abc*[0-9]*xyz* )
t="${line##abc}"
echo "num is ${t%%xyz}";;
esac
done <"file"
For awk. I would use the following script:
/.*abc([0-9]+)xyz.*/ {
print $0;
next;
}
{
/* default, do nothing */
}
gawk '/.*abc([0-9]+)xyz.*/' file