Am 17. Sep, 2009 schwätzte Paul Mooring so: > This is probably a really obvious question but how can I match > everything up to a character not including that character with regex? > For example: > person@email.tld => person > me@here.com => me Use parenthesis to create a back reference. For sed it's important to use the -r flag for this. $ echo person@email.tld | sed -re 's/(.+)@.+/\1/' person If you're doing this in perl you can reference the match later. If you're just trying to strip off the remainder it might be easier to do that rather than pulling up the match. $ echo person@email.tld | sed -re 's/@.+//' person In any case, you might want to search for not the delimiter rather than any character. $ echo person@email@.tld | sed -re 's/(.+)@.+/\1/' person@email $ echo person@email@.tld | sed -re 's/([^@]+)@.+/\1/' person ciao, der.hans -- # http://www.LuftHans.com/ http://www.ABLEconf.com/ # Director of Engineering, FonWallet Transaction Solutions, Inc. # ABLEconf: Saturday, 2009Okt24, Tempe. Call for Presentations now open. # If you have an apple and I have an apple and we exchange apples then # you and I will still each have one apple. But if you have an idea and # I have an idea and we exchange these ideas, then each of us will have # two ideas. -- George Bernard Shaw