In Catmandu you can do this with this script (which will also filter out all 
valid ISSN numbers)…

# cpanm Catmandu Catmandu::Identifier

$ cat myfix.txt
marc_map('***',text.$append)

filter(text,'(\b\d{4}-?\d{3}[\dxX]\b)')
replace_all(text.*,'.*(\b\d{4}-?\d{3}[\dxX]\b).*',$1)

do list(path:text)
  unless is_valid_issn(.)
    reject()
  end
end

vacuum()

select exists(text)

join_field(text,' ; ')

retain(_id,text)

$ catmandu convert MARC to CSV --fix myfix.fix < data.mrc

Patrick

> On 2 Nov 2016, at 11:29, Sergio Letuche <code4libus...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> thank you very much
> 
> 2016-11-02 12:28 GMT+02:00 Ben Soares <ben.soa...@ed.ac.uk>:
> Hi Sergio,
> 
> Try
> 
> ^\d{4}-\d{3}[\dxX]$
> 
> if you know that they will always be formatted with a hyphen in the middle, or
> 
> ^\d{4}-?\d{3}[\dxX]$
> 
> if you can't be sure of that.
> 
> (and if you're interested in spotting ISSNs in the middle of a field use
> \b\d{4}-?\d{3}[\dxX]\b
> but beware this also finds year ranges [e.g. 1990-2000]!)
> 
> Ben
> 
> 
> On Wednesday, 2 November 2016 12:06:15 GMT Sergio Letuche wrote:
> > Thank you dear Stefano,
> >
> > i am aware of this module, it works great.
> >
> > But my problem is, what clever regex to use, in order to identify if a
> > subfield's content, is an ISSN number. Say our mrc has ISSN numbers thrown
> > in any tag you could imagine...
> >
> > So my approach, would be, to search the whole mrc, but i do non know which
> > regex to use...
> >
> > 2016-11-02 11:52 GMT+02:00 Stefano Bargioni <bargi...@pusc.it>:
> > > Hi, Sergio:
> > > you can try MARCgrep http://en.pusc.it/bib/MARCgrep.
> > > Its help is:
> > >
> > > MARCgrep.pl
> > >
> > >        Extracts MARC records that match a condition on fields. Count and
> > >        invert are available.
> > >
> > > SYNOPSIS
> > >
> > >        MARCgrep.pl [options] [-e condition] file.mrc
> > >
> > >         Options:
> > >           -h   print this help message and exit
> > >           -c   count only
> > >           -e   condition
> > >           -f   comma separated list of fields to print
> > >           -o   output format "marc" | "line" | "INLINE"
> > >           -s   separator string for condition, default ","
> > >           -v   invert match
> > >
> > >         Condition:
> > >           -e  'tag,indicator1,indicator2,subfield,value'
> > >
> > > OPTIONS
> > >
> > >        -h      Print this message and exit.
> > >
> > >        -c      Count and print number of matching records
> > >
> > >        -e      The condition to match in the record.
> > >
> > >                 For data fields, the syntax is:
> > >                   tag,indicator1,indicator2,subfield,value
> > >
> > >                 where tag, indicator1, indicator2, subfield, and value are
> > >
> > > regular expressions patterns.
> > >
> > >                 Do not put spaces around the separators.
> > >
> > >                 For control fields, the syntax is:
> > >                   tag,pos1,pos2,value
> > >
> > >                 where tag starts with '00' (use '000' or 'LDR' for
> > >
> > > leader), pos1 is the starting position,
> > >
> > >                 pos2 is the ending position, both 0-based. Value is a
> > >
> > > regular expression.
> > >
> > >                 Default condition (-e not specified) matches any data
> > >
> > > field.
> > >
> > >                 For control fields, only the tag is mandatory.
> > >
> > >                 Examples: -e '100,,,a,^A' will match records that contain
> > >
> > > 100$a starting with 'A'
> > >
> > >                           -e '008,35,37,(ita|eng)' will match records with
> > >
> > > language ita or eng in 008
> > >
> > >                           -e '(1|7)(0|1)(0|1),,2' will match
> > >
> > > 100,110,111,700,710,711 with ind2=2
> > >
> > >        -f      Comma separated list of fields (tags) to print if output
> > >
> > > format
> > >
> > >                is "line" or "inline". Default is any field.
> > >
> > >                 Note that if a tag is preceded by '#' sign (like in
> > >
> > > '#nnn'), a
> > >
> > >                count of occurrences will be printed instead.
> > >
> > >                 Examples: -f '100,245' will print field 100 and 245
> > >
> > >                           -f '400,#400' will print all occurrences of 400
> > >
> > > field as well as the number of its occurrences
> > >
> > >        -o      Output format: "marc" for ISO2709, "line" for each subfield
> > >
> > > in
> > >
> > >                a line, "inline" (default) for each field in a line.
> > >
> > >        -s      Specify a string separator for condition. Default is ','.
> > >
> > >        -v      Invert the sense of matching, to select non-matching
> > >
> > > records.
> > >
> > >        -V      Print the version and exit.
> > >
> > >        file.mrc
> > >
> > >                The mandatory ISO2709 file to read. Can be STDIN, '-'.
> > >
> > > DESCRIPTION
> > >
> > >        Like grep, the famous Unix utility, MARCgrep.pl allows to filter
> > >
> > > MARC
> > >
> > >        bibliographic
> > >
> > >         records based on conditions on tag, indicators, and field value.
> > >
> > >        Conditions can be applied to data fields, control fields or the
> > >
> > > leader.
> > >
> > >        In case of data fields, the condition can specify tag, indicators,
> > >        subfield and value using regular
> > >
> > >         expressions. In case of control fields, the condition must contain
> > >
> > > the
> > >
> > >        tag name, the starting
> > >
> > >         and ending position (both 0-based), and a regular expressions for
> > >
> > > the
> > >
> > >        value.
> > >
> > >        Options -c and -v allow respectively to count matching records and
> > >
> > > to
> > >
> > >        invert the match.
> > >
> > >        If option -c is not specified, the output format can be "line" or
> > >        "inline" (both human readable),
> > >
> > >         or "marc" for MARC binary (ISO2709). For formats "line" or
> > >
> > > "inline",
> > >
> > >        the -f option allows to specify
> > >
> > >         fields to print.
> > >
> > >        You can chain more conditions using
> > >
> > >        ./MARCGgrep.pl -o marc -e condition1 file.mrc | ./MARCGgrep.pl -e
> > >        condition2 -
> > >
> > > KNOWN ISSUES
> > >
> > >        Performance.
> > >
> > >        Accepts and returns only UTF-8.
> > >
> > >        Checks are case sensitive.
> > >
> > > AUTHOR
> > >
> > >        Pontificia Universita' della Santa Croce <http://www.pusc.it/bib/>
> > >
> > >        Stefano Bargioni <bargi...@pusc.it>
> > >
> > > SEE ALSO
> > >
> > >        marktriggs / marcgrep at <https://github.com/marktriggs/marcgrep>
> > >
> > > for
> > >
> > >        filtering large data sets
> > > >
> > > > On 02 nov 2016, at 09:57, Sergio Letuche <code4libus...@gmail.com>
> > >
> > > wrote:
> > > > Hello community,
> > > >
> > > > how would you treat the following?
> > > >
> > > > I need a way to identify all tags - subfields, that have stored an ISSN
> > >
> > > number in them.
> > >
> > > > What would you suggest as a clever approach for this?
> > > >
> > > > Thank you
> 
> 
> 
> --
> The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in
> Scotland, with registration number SC005336.
> 
> 

Patrick Hochstenbach - digital architect
University Library Ghent
Sint-Hubertusstraat 8 - 9000 Ghent - Belgium
patrick.hochstenb...@ugent.be
+32 (0)9 264 7980

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