cross-posted from: https://lemmy.run/post/10868

Beginner’s Guide to grep

grep is a powerful command-line tool used for searching and filtering text in files. It allows you to find specific patterns or strings within files, making it an invaluable tool for developers, sysadmins, and anyone working with text data. In this guide, we will cover the basics of using grep and provide you with some useful examples to get started.

Installation

grep is a standard utility on most Unix-like systems, including Linux and macOS. If you’re using a Windows operating system, you can install it by using the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) or through tools like Git Bash, Cygwin, or MinGW.

Basic Usage

The basic syntax of grep is as follows:

grep [options] pattern [file(s)]
  • options: Optional flags that modify the behavior of grep.
  • pattern: The pattern or regular expression to search for.
  • file(s): Optional file(s) to search within. If not provided, grep will read from standard input.

Examples

Searching in a Single File

To search for a specific pattern in a single file, use the following command:

grep "pattern" file.txt

Replace "pattern" with the text you want to search for and file.txt with the name of the file you want to search in.

Searching in Multiple Files

If you want to search for a pattern across multiple files, use the following command:

grep "pattern" file1.txt file2.txt file3.txt

You can specify as many files as you want, separating them with spaces.

Ignoring Case

By default, grep is case-sensitive. To perform a case-insensitive search, use the -i option:

grep -i "pattern" file.txt

Displaying Line Numbers

To display line numbers along with the matching lines, use the -n option:

grep -n "pattern" file.txt

This can be helpful when you want to know the line numbers where matches occur.

Searching Recursively

To search for a pattern in all files within a directory and its subdirectories, use the -r option (recursive search):

grep -r "pattern" directory/

Replace directory/ with the path to the directory you want to search in.

Using Regular Expressions

grep supports regular expressions for more advanced pattern matching. Here’s an example using a regular expression to search for email addresses:

grep -E "\b[A-Za-z0-9._%+-]+@[A-Za-z0-9.-]+\.[A-Za-z]{2,}\b" file.txt

In this case, the -E option enables extended regular expressions.

Conclusion

grep is a versatile tool that can greatly enhance your text searching and filtering capabilities. With the knowledge you’ve gained in this beginner’s guide, you can start using grep to quickly find and extract the information you need from text files. Experiment with different options and explore more advanced regular expressions to further expand your skills with grep. Happy grepping!

8 points

Did you know the whole grep program was written within a day, by non other then Ken Thompson https://youtube.com/watch?v=NTfOnGZUZDk&feature=share7

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4 points

I did not.

Thank you for sharing it. Something you learn everyday, eh 😀.

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5 points

This is cool, but I’d love to see some examples outputs so I can get a sense of what it actually does.

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2 points

Sure, will try to include output in future. Appreciate the feedback.

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4 points
*

You can live without vim, but not without cat and grep.

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1 point

Very true and I always combine them when I dont need to, using cat file.txt | grep foo instead of just grep foo file.txt

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1 point

Yeah, IDK why, just feels kinda natural.

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4 points
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If you are serious about working in a terminal, then I highly recommend learning modern replacements for the old tools.

In this case ripgrep (or rg) https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep is phenomenal. Especially for searching recursively in a large directory tree it is unbelievably quicker than regular grep.

It won’t be installed on any random machine, so grep is still useful, but if you regularly need to text search in files then there are better tools.

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5 points

Yeap, but most of the time you end up trying to figure out issue on remote system, where you don’t have ripgrep always installed, but if you have that available on the system you are working on. ripgrep is always a better alternative.

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3 points
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Good information and barely scratches the surface of grep usage. It can get a lot more complicated but also do a lot more than you think.

Two of my most used grep invocations are:

  • Diff two files, showing lines: grep -xvFf (file2) (file1)
  • Show lines that do not contain a string: grep -rivE '^#' (file) ( only shows uncommented lines for most Linux configuration files)
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