How to grep for contents after pattern?

sed -n 's/^potato:[[:space:]]*//p' file.txt

One can think of Grep as a restricted Sed, or of Sed as a generalized Grep. In this case, Sed is one good, lightweight tool that does what you want -- though, of course, there exist several other reasonable ways to do it, too.


grep -Po 'potato:\s\K.*' file

-P to use Perl regular expression

-o to output only the match

\s to match the space after potato:

\K to omit the match

.* to match rest of the string(s)


Or use regex assertions: grep -oP '(?<=potato: ).*' file.txt


grep 'potato:' file.txt | sed 's/^.*: //'

grep looks for any line that contains the string potato:, then, for each of these lines, sed replaces (s/// - substitute) any character (.*) from the beginning of the line (^) until the last occurrence of the sequence : (colon followed by space) with the empty string (s/...// - substitute the first part with the second part, which is empty).

or

grep 'potato:' file.txt | cut -d\   -f2

For each line that contains potato:, cut will split the line into multiple fields delimited by space (-d\ - d = delimiter, \ = escaped space character, something like -d" " would have also worked) and print the second field of each such line (-f2).

or

grep 'potato:' file.txt | awk '{print $2}'

For each line that contains potato:, awk will print the second field (print $2) which is delimited by default by spaces.

or

grep 'potato:' file.txt | perl -e 'for(<>){s/^.*: //;print}'

All lines that contain potato: are sent to an inline (-e) Perl script that takes all lines from stdin, then, for each of these lines, does the same substitution as in the first example above, then prints it.

or

awk '{if(/potato:/) print $2}' < file.txt

The file is sent via stdin (< file.txt sends the contents of the file via stdin to the command on the left) to an awk script that, for each line that contains potato: (if(/potato:/) returns true if the regular expression /potato:/ matches the current line), prints the second field, as described above.

or

perl -e 'for(<>){/potato:/ && s/^.*: // && print}' < file.txt

The file is sent via stdin (< file.txt, see above) to a Perl script that works similarly to the one above, but this time it also makes sure each line contains the string potato: (/potato:/ is a regular expression that matches if the current line contains potato:, and, if it does (&&), then proceeds to apply the regular expression described above and prints the result).

Tags:

Linux

Grep