John Wheat wrote: > I am seeking help to memorize, utilize, and gain > basic proficiency with regular expressions and > sed, grep, egrep searches and the like. Hi, John. I don't know any nifty tricks, but I can help a little. First, you are not alone. I think in English, and the only way I can grok regexp is going left to right, a nibble at a time. I use them all the time, and am now pretty good with basic regexp, but I am never ashamed of going back to the man pages to help me decode an expression. And in a pinch, you can post it here for help decoding. Make sure you give us the whole command, and maybe some sample data snippets, when asking for help. Be aware that there are a few different dialects of regexp, and you need to stay in context. Besides what you mentioned, I often use regexp to do searches and editing in vi or vim, and I use Perl a lot. So as you begin to learn this, stay in one context where possible to avoid unnecessary confusion. The most basic stuff works everywhere, but you run into annoying differences pretty quickly. Usually on the command line you need to use some back-slashes or another form of quoting for parens, brackets, etc. Just where this is needed is an added source of confusion for me. The example you gave worried me a little: \^{a-r}\ has its slashes leaning the wrong way, and I think those curly braces should be square ones. So I'm kinda hoping you just hammered that out at random in your frustration! :-) But if not, hopefully someone here will know what that's referring to. In case you meant /^[a-r]/ -- that would match any line beginning with a lower case letter between "a" and "r". In grep or egrep, -i makes matching case-insensitive. ^ at the very beginning always means the match must begin in column 1. Square brackets mean a set of characters, any of which will match. A hyphen shows a range of letters in the character set. Forget "man 7 regexp", that is far too abstract for me to parse. Try this, I just looked it up for you: http://sitescooper.org/tao_regexps.html For Perl, try this: man perlre For another command, e.g. sed, Google for: regexp examples sed Hang in there! Vic --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss