grep: constructing a regex pattern to exclude several groups












0














I have a folder with three files:



$ ls

aaa.txt abc.txt def.txt


If I want to grep the output excluding the abc.txt file I can do:



$ ls | grep -v 'abc'

aaa.txt
def.txt


If I want to exclude two files I can do:



$ ls | grep -v 'abc' | grep -v 'def'

aaa.txt


But how can I do this using one regex and one grep invocation?



This does not work:



$ ls | grep -v '[(abc)(def)]'


neither does this:



$ ls | grep -v "abc|def"









share|improve this question



























    0














    I have a folder with three files:



    $ ls

    aaa.txt abc.txt def.txt


    If I want to grep the output excluding the abc.txt file I can do:



    $ ls | grep -v 'abc'

    aaa.txt
    def.txt


    If I want to exclude two files I can do:



    $ ls | grep -v 'abc' | grep -v 'def'

    aaa.txt


    But how can I do this using one regex and one grep invocation?



    This does not work:



    $ ls | grep -v '[(abc)(def)]'


    neither does this:



    $ ls | grep -v "abc|def"









    share|improve this question

























      0












      0








      0







      I have a folder with three files:



      $ ls

      aaa.txt abc.txt def.txt


      If I want to grep the output excluding the abc.txt file I can do:



      $ ls | grep -v 'abc'

      aaa.txt
      def.txt


      If I want to exclude two files I can do:



      $ ls | grep -v 'abc' | grep -v 'def'

      aaa.txt


      But how can I do this using one regex and one grep invocation?



      This does not work:



      $ ls | grep -v '[(abc)(def)]'


      neither does this:



      $ ls | grep -v "abc|def"









      share|improve this question













      I have a folder with three files:



      $ ls

      aaa.txt abc.txt def.txt


      If I want to grep the output excluding the abc.txt file I can do:



      $ ls | grep -v 'abc'

      aaa.txt
      def.txt


      If I want to exclude two files I can do:



      $ ls | grep -v 'abc' | grep -v 'def'

      aaa.txt


      But how can I do this using one regex and one grep invocation?



      This does not work:



      $ ls | grep -v '[(abc)(def)]'


      neither does this:



      $ ls | grep -v "abc|def"






      grep






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Nov 20 at 7:29









      kurtgn

      1,74522038




      1,74522038
























          1 Answer
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          Use the ERE(Extended Regular Expression) pattern for the alternation match | which is not enabled by default in BRE (which grep uses by default)



          grep -vE "abc|def"


          or use the extended grep, i.e. egrep which enables the ERE by default



          egrep -v "abc|def"





          share|improve this answer























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            1 Answer
            1






            active

            oldest

            votes








            1 Answer
            1






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            1














            Use the ERE(Extended Regular Expression) pattern for the alternation match | which is not enabled by default in BRE (which grep uses by default)



            grep -vE "abc|def"


            or use the extended grep, i.e. egrep which enables the ERE by default



            egrep -v "abc|def"





            share|improve this answer




























              1














              Use the ERE(Extended Regular Expression) pattern for the alternation match | which is not enabled by default in BRE (which grep uses by default)



              grep -vE "abc|def"


              or use the extended grep, i.e. egrep which enables the ERE by default



              egrep -v "abc|def"





              share|improve this answer


























                1












                1








                1






                Use the ERE(Extended Regular Expression) pattern for the alternation match | which is not enabled by default in BRE (which grep uses by default)



                grep -vE "abc|def"


                or use the extended grep, i.e. egrep which enables the ERE by default



                egrep -v "abc|def"





                share|improve this answer














                Use the ERE(Extended Regular Expression) pattern for the alternation match | which is not enabled by default in BRE (which grep uses by default)



                grep -vE "abc|def"


                or use the extended grep, i.e. egrep which enables the ERE by default



                egrep -v "abc|def"






                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                answered Nov 20 at 7:31


























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