Bracket expressions are a list of characters and/or character classes enclosed in
brackets []. Use bracket expressions to match single characters in a list, or a range
of
characters in a list. If the first character of the list is the carat ^ then it matches
characters that are not in the list.
For example:
EXPRESSION
|
MATCHES
|
[abc]
|
a, b, or c
|
[a-z]
|
a through z
|
[^abc]
|
Any character except a, b, or c
|
[[:alpha:]]
|
Any alphabetic character (see below)
|
The following character classes must be within a bracket expression or it will be
treated as a common expression.
CHARACTER CLASS
|
DESCRIPTION
|
[:alpha:]
|
Alphabetic characters
|
[:digit:]
|
Digits
|
[:alnum:]
|
Alphabetic characters and numeric characters
|
[:cntrl:]
|
Control character
|
[:blank:]
|
Space and tab
|
[:space:]
|
All white space characters
|
[:graph:]
|
Non-blank (not spaces, control characters, or the like)
|
[:print:]
|
Like [:graph:], but includes the space character
|
[:punct:]
|
Punctuation characters
|
[:lower:]
|
Lowercase alphabetic character
|
[:upper:]
|
Uppercase alphabetic character
|
[:xdigit:]
|
Digits allowed in a hexadecimal number (0-9a-fA-F)
|
For example:
-
a[[:digit:]]b matches "a0b", "a1b", ..., "a9b".
-
a[:digit:]b matches "a:b", "adb", …, "atb".
-
[[:digit:]abc] matches any digit or any of "a", "b", and "c".
-
[abc[:digit:]] matches any digit or any of "a", "b", and "c".
For a case-insensitive expression, [:lower:] and [:upper:] are equivalent to [:alpha:].