Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Tue, 6 Jan 2004 13:20:52 +1100
From:      Gautam Gopalakrishnan <ggop@madras.dyndns.org>
To:        Malcolm Kay <malcolm.kay@internode.on.net>
Cc:        zhangweiwu@realss.com
Subject:   Re: help me with this sed expression
Message-ID:  <20040106022052.GA8122@madras.dyndns.org>
In-Reply-To: <200401061230.42038.malcolm.kay@internode.on.net>
References:  <Law11-F31WerOc0Ne0P00016107@hotmail.com> <200401061230.42038.malcolm.kay@internode.on.net>

next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
On Tue, Jan 06, 2004 at 12:30:42PM +1030, Malcolm Kay wrote:
> On Mon, 5 Jan 2004 22:19, Zhang Weiwu wrote:
> > Hello. I've worked an hour to figure out a serial of sed command to process
> > some text (without any luck, you kown I'm kinda newbie). I really
> > appreciate your help.
> >
> > The original text file is in this form -- for each line:
> > one Chinese word then one or two English word seperated by space.
> >
> > I tried to do things like s/\(.*\)\([a-z]*\)/\2 \1/ but the first \(.*\) is
> > too greedy and included the rest [a-z].
> 
> Well the greedy part is easily fixed with:
>   s/\([^a-z]*\)\([a-z]*\)/\2 \1/
> 
> But this will not work for those lines with 2 english words. The following should:
> % sed -n -e 's/\([^a-z]*\)\([a-z]*\) .*/\2 \1/p' -e 's/\([^a-z]*\)[a-z]* \([a-z]*\)/\2 \1/p' original > target


I think awk is easier:

awk '{print $2 " " $3 " " $1}' original | tr -s > target

Gautam



Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?20040106022052.GA8122>