Lucy,
Grep with quotes, plus force the string to be at the beginning and end of a
line:
grep ^"10.1 #Bridgewater"$
HTH,
Jerry
Jerald Murphy
Director, Network Management Services
RPM Consulting, Inc.
A Computer Horizons Company
Lucy Premus <lpremus@METLIFE.COM> on 01/08/99 04:41:12 PM
Please respond to Discussion of IBM NetView and POLYCENTER Manager on
NetView <NV-L@UCSBVM.UCSB.EDU>
To: NV-L@UCSBVM.UCSB.EDU
cc: (bcc: Jerald Murphy/RPM)
Subject: Grep
Theres probably a very simple answer to this question, but I cannot for the
life of me figure it out. How do you grep for an EXACT match of a string?
I have a file that looks something like this:
10.1. #Bridgewater
10.10. #Scranton
10.12. #White Plains
10.13. #Warwick
10.14. #Tampa
10.16. #One Penn Plaza
10.17. #Mt. Prospect
10.18. #Denver
I'm trying to grep for the exact match of 10.1. in a script. That string
will actually be in a variable defined previously in the script.
When the grep runs, it not only outputs the line 10.1. #Bridgewater
(which is what I want), but it gives me every other line
containing 10.1?. How do I prevent that from happening? I've tried
putting single quotes, double quotes, etc around the variable
name, but have had no success. Am I missing something simple
here?...............Lucy
Jerald Murphy
Director, Network Management Services
RPM Consulting, Inc.
A Computer Horizons Company
33 Wood Avenue, 5th Floor
Iselin, NJ 08830
jmurphy@rpm.com
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