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Introduction to Unix – CS 21 Lecture 7. Lecture Overview Regular expressions revisited emacs versus vi Basic emacs and vi usage.

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Presentation on theme: "Introduction to Unix – CS 21 Lecture 7. Lecture Overview Regular expressions revisited emacs versus vi Basic emacs and vi usage."— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to Unix – CS 21 Lecture 7

2 Lecture Overview Regular expressions revisited emacs versus vi Basic emacs and vi usage

3 Back To Regular Expressions You will see regular expressions pop up over and over again Important to understand how they work Always important to keep in mind that syntax can change, but the meaning will be the same grep syntax is just as good as any

4 Guidelines On Constructing Regular Expressions Break it up piece by piece If asked for a regular expression that finds two things, try to come up with regular expressions that find each individually Combine multiple R.E.’s with “or” (|) If I want all lines with “hello” in them, and you have two expressions that find different instances, one expression with an or will get all of them

5 Example Find all instances of dog but not dogs “dog[^s]” finds at the beginning or middle “dog$” finds at the end “(dog[^s])|(dog$)” finds all instances

6 More Guidelines Think about all cases Beginning, middle, and end of the line Think about what else is important on the line If I ask for lines that start with “a” and end with “e”, also think about what could go in the middle

7 In-Class Exercise Come up with regular expressions for the following: All lines that have a phone number in it 909-992-1101 or 123-4567 All lines that contain the word “lean” but not the word “cleans” All lines that start with “And” and don’t end with “of”

8 In-Class Exercise Discussion “[0-9][0-9][0-9]-[0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9]” “[0-9]{3}-[0-9]{4}” ([^c]lean[^s])|(^lean)|(lean$) (^And.*[^f]$)|(^And.*[^o]f$)

9 Actually Creating And Modifying Files Good News Multiple editors in Unix exist that allow you to create and modify text files Bad News You will have to get used to and memorize a whole bunch of commands in order to use them well

10 Editors In Unix vi The “visual” editor vim = “vi improved” emacs “editor macros” “A way of life”, not just an editor

11 “Holy War” The choice between emacs and vi divides a large part of the Unix community No real answer as to which is better, just which you prefer to use Most likely what you started out with People, will argue endlessly over why one is better than the other

12 Why Would You Use vi? Quick and small Ready to use immediately and it doesn’t consume too many resources Simple No hassles, but quite a few features that are helpful Always there vi is virtually guaranteed to be on every Unix system, emacs isn’t

13 Why Would You Use emacs? Large Specialized Modes exist that help you out for many different types of files Powerful Allows you to integrate a lot of work from the shell without leaving the editor Fast (relatively)

14 Which One Should You Choose? Whichever one you feel comfortable with Both will be introduced here and you will see the differences Try them both and figure out which suits you best

15 Unix Editors Versus Windows Editors vi knows nothing about the mouse vi doesn’t have any menu options either If emacs is run inside a terminal window, then the mouse is useless as well All conveniences can be done through keystrokes, not through mouse operations

16 Modes Of vi vi is a modal program The same key means different things depending on what mode you are in vi always begins in “command mode” You won’t be able to type in any text until you change modes “Esc” will get you into command mode

17 vi Basics Starting vi Usage: vi [FILE] Quitting vi Esc, :q

18 emacs Essentials Always able to enter text Commands are given by combinations of control keys Cntrl Meta Usually “Alt” Sometimes “Esc” (Solaris, etc.)

19 emacs Basics Starting emacs Usage: emacs [FILE] Quitting emacs Cntrl-x, Cntrl-c Book specifices Cntl-x, Cntl-h, Ctnrl-h, Cntrl-h but that doesn’t work on our system

20 Opening A File In vi In command mode, hit :e FILENAME This will abandon you previous file

21 Opening A File In emacs Cntrl-x, Cntrl-f This will switch you to a new file, but will not abandon your previous file

22 Moving Around In vi With vim, the arrow keys, page up, and page down work just fine On some systems, you will need to use special keys in command mode Cntrl-f = page down Cntrl-b = page up h, j, k, l = work like the arrow keys Left, down, up, right respectively

23 Specific Movement Commands In vi w = move forward one word b = move backward one word 0 = move to the beginning of a line $ = move to the end of the line Cntrl-u = move up half a page Cntrl-b = move down half a page

24 Moving Around In Emacs Arrow keys and page up, page down work fine Special keys exist just in case Cntrl-f = one character forward Cntrl-b = one character backward Cntrl-v = Page Down Meta-v = Page up

25 Special Movement Commands In emacs Meta-f = move forward one word Meta-b = move backward one word Cntrl-a = move to the beginning of the line Cntrl-e = move to the end of the line Meta-a = move to the beginning of a sentence Meta-e = move to the end of a sentence

26 Simple Searching In vi In command mode, type “/” followed by the word you are looking for To go to the next occurrence, in command mode type “n” Search forwards “N” will go to previous occurrences in the file Search backwards

27 Simple Searching In emacs Cntrl-s Type in the word you are searching for Searches the file forwards Cntrl-S again will move you to the next occurance Cntrl-r Works exactly the same way, but searches backwards through the file

28 Inserting In vi First, make get into “insertion mode” i = transfer into insertion mode o = transfer into insertion mode in a new line below the current line O = transfer into insertion mode in a new line above the current line Now type as normal

29 Inserting In emacs Just type as normal I see this as the biggest advantage emacs has over vi No special command is needed to start inserting text Combined with the menus, emacs is a little easier for beginners to handle

30 Deleting In vi x = delete one character dw = delete one word dd = delete one line d10 = delete 10 more lines (11 actually)

31 Deleting In emacs Cntrl-d = delete one character Meta-d = delete next word Cntrl-k = delete one line

32 Cut And Pasting In vi Whatever was just deleted is available to be pasted Word, character, or block of lines In command mode, “P” will paste most recently cut object

33 Cut And Pasting In emacs As long as you are deleting lines with Cntrl-k, those lines can be pasted somewhere else Cntrl-y will paste most recently cut lines

34 Saving Changes In vi In command mode, hit “:w” If you want to quit without saving changes, you need to the command “:q!”

35 Saving Changes In emacs Cntrl-x, Cntrl-s If you want to exit without saving changes, Cntrl-x, Cntrl-c as normal and then you will be prompted on if you really want to do that

36 Emacs Backup Files Emacs will automatically backup the last version of a file whenever you save new changes Example~ Whenever a problem occurs, another file gets created #Example#

37 Next Time We go into a lot more depth with emacs and vi A lot of tricks that come in handy will be presented


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