Day 14 - Regular expressions - Classes
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$ cat examples.txt | grep -E "[a-zA-Z]"
matches any letter, but not digits. Pay attention that a range like A-z (uppercase A and lowercase
z) works but will match also other characters that are encoded between uppercase and lowercase
letters, namely [, \, ], ^, _, and “‘. If your intention is that of including those characters you might
want to explicitly add them to the class, as the A-z syntax might be easily overlooked. Be kind to
whoever will have to debug your code, the Unix terminal is already more cryptic than ancient tomes
of magic, don’t make it worse.
Remember that a class, that is the whole block between square brackets, brackets included, is just
an element of the regular expression, and can be followed or preceded by other elements. Exercises
2 and 3 will help you to see this in practice.
Exercises
Exercise 14.07
Match any line of examples.txt containing a digit
Go to solution
Exercise 14.08
Match any line of examples.txt containing a lowercase “a” followed by any letter (that is “aa”, “ab”,
“ac”, and so on)
Go to solution
Exercise 14.09
Match any line of examples.txt containing an upper case letter followed by a digit
Go to solution
Exercise 14.10
Match any line of examples.txt containing a dash
Go to solution