Would somebody please explain?
Guy Harris
guy at auspex.auspex.com
Tue Apr 23 04:05:00 AEST 1991
> From the output I would guess that 'match', 'index', 'substr' and 'length'
>are builin functions or operators for 'expr',
They are.
>although they are not documented in any man pages that I have seen.
The original V7 "expr" had all of 'em built in. The SunOS 4.0.3 manual
page documents them:
string : regular-expression
match string regular-expression
The two forms of the matching operator above are
synonymous. The matching operators : and match compare
the first argument with the second argument which must
be a regular expression. Regular expression syntax is
the same as that of ed(1), except that all patterns are
anchored (treated as if they begin with ^) and,
therefore, ^ is not a special character, in that con-
text. Normally, the matching operator returns the
number of characters matched (0 on failure). Alterna-
tively, the \(...\) pattern symbols can be used to
return a portion of the first argument.
substr string integer-1 integer-2
Extract the subtring of string starting at position
integer-1 and of length integer-2 characters. If
integer-1 has a value greater than the length of
string, expr returns a null string. If you try to
extract more characters than there are in string, expr
returns all the remaining characters from string.
Beware of using negative values for either integer-1 or
integer-2 as expr tends to run forever in these cases.
index string character-list
Report the first position in string at which any one of
the characters in character-list matches a character in
string.
length string
Return the length (that is, the number of characters)
of string.
The S5 version ripped "substr", "index", and "length" out - probably to
avoid the problem reported in the original posting - but kept "match" as
an alias for ":", for reasons not obvious to me (considering that doing
so means that the problem reported in the original posting is *NOT*
avoided).
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