It is exactly the same. I initially thought that I have cracked the code but it is not workin. I have been blocked in stackoverflow for misguidance and can not edit the post.
I have tried entire weekend but could not make this work.
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Maybe now is a good time to post the actual code you're using, together with a representative, short example of the data you're using. Also tell us exactly how your code does "not work". That means telling us what it outputs, and what you think it should output instead.
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My data files are exactly similar to what I have shown in the initial file. I have just installed strawberry perl so don't know how to code. I want to perform find and replace in text file using perl regular expression. I am fan of PCRE and have some knowledge. While asking for command line alternative to notepad++, I was suggested, perl is good choice.
I tried for following file
1
2
3
4
dog
1
2
3
4
5
puppy
7
8
I want to replace dog with puppy. Sometimes I want preserve lines between them too sometimes and wan't to remove the lines other times.
While using this one liner
perl -i.bak -pe "BEGIN{undef $/;} s/(dog)((.*[\r\n]+){6})(.*)/$1/smg" 4.txt
it gives
1
2
3
4
dog
while notepad pcre gives desired result wile using find (dog)((.*[\r\n]+){6})(.*) and replace with \1
1
2
3
4
7
dog
8
like wise when I replace it with \2 it gave all the lines without dog and puppy. and while \3 gave me puppy in place of dog in above mentioned result. all behaves perfectly.
So the main thing that I want is to make grouping as follow. group 1= dog, Group 2 = 6 lines after found string i.e.dog. group 3 = whatever present on line 7.
I want to be able to put back the groups as required.
Questions un answered
How to use grouping in perl while using regex that matches new line? Am I using rightly grouping in perl in my above code?
How to specify substitution? does substitution formula is correct as a whole in my code?
How to specified remembered groups? Am I making any mistake in substitution position while specifying group like $1, $2, $3 or sometimes $& (what is found)
I don't have sufficient knowledge to understand what you have suggested so I tried
perl -i.bak -pe "BEGIN{undef $/;} s/(dog)(.*([^\n]*\r?\n){6})(.*)/$1/smg" 4.txt
gave same results as with earlier oneliner
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