diff options
author | Thomas Voss <mail@thomasvoss.com> | 2024-01-22 13:28:30 +0100 |
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committer | Thomas Voss <mail@thomasvoss.com> | 2024-01-22 13:33:04 +0100 |
commit | 912da4241774194c9cbb4bfca13384b14c5211aa (patch) | |
tree | d5c66b5f8f3a39160ebe236c023fef869e9daf4b | |
parent | 9dffaf04d5c4c58e50df74dd68b11862e2a35e05 (diff) |
Change v and y to G and X
-rw-r--r-- | README.md | 16 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | man/grab.1 | 12 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | src/grab.c | 10 |
3 files changed, 19 insertions, 19 deletions
@@ -36,8 +36,8 @@ command is optional. For example, a pattern string may look like ‘`x/[a-z]+/ g.foo. v/bar/`’. -The available operators are ‘g’, ‘v’, ‘x’, and ‘y’. The ‘g’ and ‘v’ -operators are filter operators, while ‘x’ and ‘y’ are selection +The available operators are ‘g’, ‘G’, ‘x’, and ‘X’. The ‘g’ and ‘G’ +operators are filter operators, while ‘x’ and ‘X’ are selection operators. You probably want to begin your pattern with a selection operator. By @@ -52,11 +52,11 @@ echo 'foo12bar34baz' | grab 'x/[0-9]+/' # ⇒ 34 ``` -The ‘y’ operator works in reverse, selecting everything that _doesn’t_ +The ‘X’ operator works in reverse, selecting everything that _doesn’t_ match the given regex: ```sh -echo 'foo12bar34baz' | grab 'y/[0-9]+/' +echo 'foo12bar34baz' | grab 'X/[0-9]+/' # ⇒ foo # ⇒ bar # ⇒ baz @@ -64,7 +64,7 @@ echo 'foo12bar34baz' | grab 'y/[0-9]+/' You can additionally use filter operators to keep or discard certain results. The ‘g’ operator will filter out any results that don’t match -the given regex, while the ‘v’ operator will do the opposite. To select +the given regex, while the ‘G’ operator will do the opposite. To select all numbers that contain a ‘3’ we can thus do: ``` sh @@ -78,7 +78,7 @@ echo 'foo12bar34baz' | grab 'x/[0-9]+/ g/3/' Likewise to select all numbers that don’t contain a ‘3’: ```sh -echo 'foo12bar34baz' | grab 'x/[0-9]+/ v/3/' +echo 'foo12bar34baz' | grab 'x/[0-9]+/ G/3/' # ⇒ 12 ``` @@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ contain a ‘3’ but aren’t the specific number ‘1337’, we could do the following: ```sh -grab 'x/[0-9]+/ g/3/ v/^1337$/' /foo/bar +grab 'x/[0-9]+/ g/3/ G/^1337$/' /foo/bar ``` @@ -103,7 +103,7 @@ grep '^flags' /proc/cpuinfo \ | uniq # With Grab -grab 'x/^flags.*/ x/\w+/ v/flags/' /proc/cpuinfo \ +grab 'x/^flags.*/ x/\w+/ G/flags/' /proc/cpuinfo \ | sort \ | uniq ``` @@ -181,29 +181,29 @@ The supported operators are as follows: .Bl -tag -compact .It g Keep selections that match the given regex. -.It v +.It G Discard selections that match the given regex. .It x Select everything that matches the given regex. -.It y +.It X Select everything that doesn’t match the given regex. .El .Pp An example pattern to match all numbers that contain a ‘3’ but aren’t ‘1337’ could be -.Sq x/[0\-9]+/ g/3/ v/^1337$/ . +.Sq x/[0\-9]+/ g/3/ G/^1337$/ . In that pattern, .Sq x/[0\-9]+/ selects all numbers in the input, .Sq g/3/ keeps only those matches that contain the number 3, and -.Sq v/^1337$/ +.Sq G/^1337$/ filters out the specific number 1337. .Pp As you may use whichever delimiter you like, the following is also valid: .Pp -.Dl x|[0\-9]+| g.3. v#^1337# +.Dl x|[0\-9]+| g.3. G#^1337# .Sh ENVIRONMENT .Bl -tag -width GRAB_COLORS .It Ev GRAB_COLORS @@ -251,7 +251,7 @@ option is provided. .Sh EXAMPLES List all your systems CPU flags, sorted and without duplicates: .Pp -.Dl $ grab 'x/^flags.*/ x/\ew+/ v/flags/' | sort | uniq +.Dl $ grab 'x/^flags.*/ x/\ew+/ G/flags/' | sort | uniq .Pp Search for a pattern in multiple files without printing filenames: .Pp @@ -66,7 +66,7 @@ typedef void (*put_func)(struct sv, regmatch_t *, const char *); static void cmdg(struct sv, struct ops, size_t, const char *); static void cmdx(struct sv, struct ops, size_t, const char *); -static void cmdy(struct sv, struct ops, size_t, const char *); +static void cmdX(struct sv, struct ops, size_t, const char *); static void putm(struct sv, regmatch_t *, const char *); static void putm_nc(struct sv, regmatch_t *, const char *); @@ -95,9 +95,9 @@ static struct { static const cmd_func op_table[UCHAR_MAX] = { ['g'] = cmdg, - ['v'] = cmdg, + ['G'] = cmdg, ['x'] = cmdx, - ['y'] = cmdy, + ['X'] = cmdX, }; static void @@ -324,7 +324,7 @@ cmdg(struct sv sv, struct ops ops, size_t i, const char *filename) struct op op = ops.buf[i]; r = regexec(&op.pat, sv.p, 1, &rm, REG_STARTEND); - if ((r == REG_NOMATCH && op.c == 'g') || (r != REG_NOMATCH && op.c == 'v')) + if ((r == REG_NOMATCH && op.c == 'g') || (r != REG_NOMATCH && op.c == 'G')) return; if (i + 1 == ops.len) @@ -366,7 +366,7 @@ cmdx(struct sv sv, struct ops ops, size_t i, const char *filename) } void -cmdy(struct sv sv, struct ops ops, size_t i, const char *filename) +cmdX(struct sv sv, struct ops ops, size_t i, const char *filename) { regmatch_t rm = { .rm_so = 0, |