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bug#37753: wish for glob(7)-like matcher
From: |
Trent W. Buck |
Subject: |
bug#37753: wish for glob(7)-like matcher |
Date: |
Tue, 15 Oct 2019 12:43:14 +1100 |
User-agent: |
Mutt/1.10.1 (2018-07-13) |
Package: grep
Version: 2.20-4
Severity: wishlist
Tags: upstream
This bug was originally reported as
https://bugs.debian.org/813356
I am attempting to upstream it into bugs.gnu.org.
PS: nowadays I also know to mention fnmatch(3).
On Mon, 01 Feb 2016 18:19:06 +1100 "Trent W. Buck" <address@hidden> wrote:
> Sometimes I want to match globs instead of regexps.
> glob(7) explicitly says:
> "they match filenames, rather than text"
> I don't see why globs shouldn't be used for text.
>
>
> In bash this is ugly and *SLOW*, e.g.
>
> # Print log lines that match no "whitelisted" patterns.
> while read -r line
> do
> if ! [[ line = glob1 || line = glob2 || ... ]]
> then echo "$line"
> fi
> done <log
>
> instead of
>
> grep --basic-glob -vf whitelist log
>
>
> GNU grep already has options for fixed strings (-F),
> and BRE, ERE and PCRE. Can we have one for glob(7)?
>
> AFAICT nobody has asked for this before; this surprises me,
> because it "feels" like it should be easy to implement.
>
> Am I wrong?
>
> Is there a good reason to WONTFIX this?
>
>
>
> I asked my peers and the only real counterargument I got was
> "just learn regexps, you'll need them eventually".
>
> For my use case, I think globs would be more readable (esp. not having
> to escape dots and parens), and easier to teach to non-technical staff.
> (I haven't trialled it yet, because I don't have a globber that's as
> fast as GNU grep is for regexps.)
>
>
> PS: I'd have directly reported this upstream,
> but https://sv.gnu.org/bugs/?group=grep says I must be a "project member",
> and I'm not.
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