Difference between revisions of "Sgrep"

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The data model of sgrep is based on regions, which are nonempty substrings of text. Regions are typically occurrences of constant strings, SGML-tags, or meaningful text elements, which are recognizable through some delimiting strings or the builtin SGML, XML and HTML parser. Regions can be arbitrarily long, arbitrarily overlapping, and arbitrarily nested.
 
The data model of sgrep is based on regions, which are nonempty substrings of text. Regions are typically occurrences of constant strings, SGML-tags, or meaningful text elements, which are recognizable through some delimiting strings or the builtin SGML, XML and HTML parser. Regions can be arbitrarily long, arbitrarily overlapping, and arbitrarily nested.
  
Sgrep is a convenient tool for making queries to almost any kind of text files with some well kown structure. These include programs, mail folders, news folders, HTML, SGML, etc. With relatively simple queries you can display mail messages by their subject or sender, extract titles or links or any regions from HTML files, function prototypes from C or make complex queries to SGML files based on the [[DTD]] of the file.
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Like [[Grep (command)|grep]], sgrep can be used for any kind of text files. However it is most useful for text files containing some kind of structured text. Sgrep is a convenient tool for making queries to almost any kind of text files with some well kown structure. These include programs, mail folders, news folders, HTML, SGML, TeX, etc. With relatively simple queries you can display mail messages by their subject or sender, extract titles or links or any regions from HTML files, function prototypes from C or make complex queries to SGML files based on the [[DTD]] of the file.
  
 
== Usage ==
 
== Usage ==
 
=== Simple example ===
 
=== Simple example ===
 
  % sgrep -o "%f:%r\n" 'word("foo") or word("bar")' foobar
 
  % sgrep -o "%f:%r\n" 'word("foo") or word("bar")' foobar
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== See also ==
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* [[Grep (command)|grep]]
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* [[awk]]
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* [[sed]]
  
 
== External links ==
 
== External links ==

Revision as of 21:29, 6 September 2006

The correct title of this article is sgrep. The initial letter is capitalized due to technical restrictions.

sgrep (structured grep) is a command line tool for searching and indexing text, SGML, XML, and HTML files and filtering text streams using structural criteria. It was written by Jani Jaakkola and Pekka Kilpeläinen. It is included in the SuSE Linux package.

The data model of sgrep is based on regions, which are nonempty substrings of text. Regions are typically occurrences of constant strings, SGML-tags, or meaningful text elements, which are recognizable through some delimiting strings or the builtin SGML, XML and HTML parser. Regions can be arbitrarily long, arbitrarily overlapping, and arbitrarily nested.

Like grep, sgrep can be used for any kind of text files. However it is most useful for text files containing some kind of structured text. Sgrep is a convenient tool for making queries to almost any kind of text files with some well kown structure. These include programs, mail folders, news folders, HTML, SGML, TeX, etc. With relatively simple queries you can display mail messages by their subject or sender, extract titles or links or any regions from HTML files, function prototypes from C or make complex queries to SGML files based on the DTD of the file.

Usage

Simple example

% sgrep -o "%f:%r\n" 'word("foo") or word("bar")' foobar

See also

External links