[ << ] | [ < ] | [ Up ] | [ > ] | [ >> ] | [Top] | [Contents] | [Index] | [ ? ] |
3.6 Basic vs Extended Regular Expressions
In basic regular expressions the meta-characters ‘?’, ‘+’, ‘{’, ‘|’, ‘(’, and ‘)’ lose their special meaning; instead use the backslashed versions ‘\?’, ‘\+’, ‘\{’, ‘\|’, ‘\(’, and ‘\)’.
Traditional egrep
did not support the ‘{’ meta-character,
and some egrep
implementations support ‘\{’ instead, so
portable scripts should avoid ‘{’ in ‘grep -E’ patterns and
should use ‘[{]’ to match a literal ‘{’.
GNU grep -E
attempts to support traditional usage by
assuming that ‘{’ is not special if it would be the start of an
invalid interval specification.
For example, the command
‘grep -E '{1'’ searches for the two-character string ‘{1’
instead of reporting a syntax error in the regular expression.
POSIX allows this behavior as an extension, but portable scripts
should avoid it.
This document was generated on June 7, 2014 using texi2html 5.0.