On Tue, Jan 07, 2003 at 10:55:54AM -0600, will trillich wrote: [...] > slight rewording needed -- "black" comes back as true BECAUSE IT > DOESN'T MATCH, and that's what you're looking for with !~. it > might seem like a small distinction until you realize how easy > it is to be misled! :) Right, sorry for my being so clumsy.
> using brackets, /[something]/ will match any s, o, m, e, t, h, > i, n, or g. Yes, I know that as well. You're right, though. My problem was that I misunderstood another concept: if the character class begins with a caret "^", then it means "except", so I thought that grouping things would still apply. Unfortunately, it doesn't. I'll have to learn more about other extended patterns. > > all you needed to do was change !~ (doesn't match) to =~ (does > match) and you should be done. I know -- I knew that and I've done it. I was doing this out of curiosity. 8-) andrej -- echo ${girl_name} > /etc/dumpdates -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]