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  • In BASH splitting into substring based on pattern(or) last occurrence of a digit (**)

    Hi,

    I am trying to split string into substring based on pattern in bash (or) based on last occurance of a digit
    y=`echo "AB097865ATCTCTAGCAGTGGCGCCCGAACAGGGCACGCGAA"|grep "[AT|AC|AG|AA|CT|CC|CA|CG|GT|GC|GA|GG|TT|TC|TA|TG]"`

    I tried to do like this but failed

    I want to get the substring after the last digit and
    result should be

    ATCTCTAGCAGTGGCGCCCGAACAGGGCACGCGAA

    Thanks so much for help

    Anusha

  • #2
    ugly way ... pick a character not in the input, in this case '_' ...
    y=`echo "AB097865ATCTCTAGCAGTGGCGCCCGAACAGGGCACGCGAA" | sed 's/[0-9]/_/g' | awk -F "_" '{print $NF}'`
    echo $y

    better (I think) ..

    y=`echo "AB097865ATCTCTAGCAGTGGCGCCCGAACAGGGCACGCGAA" | sed 's/.*[0-9]//g' `
    echo $y
    Last edited by Richard Finney; 03-26-2016, 03:27 PM.

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    • #3
      I have always thought that invoking sed/awk or any of the other programming tools for work inside Bash is ..., well, cheating. Useful in the practical "let us get stuff done" sense but at that point one might as just well write Perl or Python, etc. code. 'sort', 'cut', 'grep' are valid tools within a script since they are not really programming.

      Anyway to the OP, look at:



      It has an example of what you want to do.
      Last edited by westerman; 03-28-2016, 12:44 PM. Reason: spelling

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      • #4
        Variable substitution

        foo="AB097865ATCTCTAGCAGTGGCGCCCGAACAGGGCACGCGAA"
        echo ${foo##*[0-9]}
        ATCTCTAGCAGTGGCGCCCGAACAGGGCACGCGAA
        Last edited by tomc; 03-28-2016, 01:24 PM. Reason: what it is

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