Am 02. Apr, 2008 schwätzte Kevin Faulkner so: > First off, I've been trying to do this for a little while, but keep on getting > dragged off to other things. My goal is to get sed to pull off the .xxx of the > file. So lets say you have documentation.odt timesheet.ods archive.zip and > readme.txt I would like sed to pull off these: ods zip odt txt. I figured I > would do it like this > ls -l |awk '{print $8}'|sed -e '/$\.+++/p > ls -l |awk '{print $8}'|sed -e '/^\.+++/p > (I also used ? in place of the +) > I have also tried this. > ls -l |awk '{print $8}'|grep -e "*\.[a-z] ls -ld *.??? | awk '{print $8 }' | sed -re 's/\..{3}$//' Use -r to turn on extended regex, then {3} to say 3 anythings. Do you need to care about jpg and jpeg? If you use the p command, you'll get double the output as sed is already passing through the changed value. > I'm not sure if I just don't understand sed, or if its a problem with regular > expressions, but either way, I can't get it work. Even * should work as it is any character. A little guidance would be nice. Thanks folks. * is any character in globbing, but not in regex. . is any character in regex. * is 0 or more of whatever in regex. + is one or more of whatever in regex. ? is 0 or 1 of whatever in regex. ? is one of whatever in globbing. * is 0 or more any combo in globbing. ciao, der.hans -- # https://www.LuftHans.com/ https://LOPSA.org/ # "Communications without intelligence is noise; # Intelligence without communications is irrelevant." # Gen. Alfred. M. Gray, USMC