Bash =~
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Internal
Overview
The string to the right of the = ̃ operator is considered an extended regular expression and matched against the string to the left of the operator. The rules governing the extended regular expression are described in regex(3).
if [[ "string_to_be_matched_against_regex" =~ regex ]]; then
# match
else
# no match
fi
Usage is subject to the following constraints:
- The use of [[...]] is required.
- DO NOT use double quotes when specifying the regular expression, just specify the regex literal directly.
- If the regular expression contains spaces, use single quotes to denote space:
if [["something" =~ ${regex}' ' ]]; then ...
This also works:
[[ "${output}" =~ "chart type".*"required" ]]
- Variable substitution works for both the string to be matched and the regular expression. When using a variable to specify the regular expression, do not enclose the variable in quotes, use it directly as in the example below:
if [[ "${var_containing_string_to_be_matched_against_regex}" =~ ${var_containing_regex} ]]; then ...
- It matches [[:space:]]
- If any part of the pattern is quoted, it is forcibly matched as a string.
- The return value is 0 if the string matches the pattern, and 1 otherwise.
- If the regular expression is syntactically incorrect, the conditional expression's return value is 2.
- If the shell option nocasematch is enabled, the match is performed without regard to the case of alphabetic characters.
- The =~ operator has the same precedence as == and !=.
Examples
A string that does not contain a slash:
if [[ ${something} =~ ^[^/]*$ ]]; then
...
fi
Multiple spaces at the end:
if [[ ${something} =~ ^blah' '* ]]; then
...
fi
TODO
regex(3)