231 lines
7.0 KiB
Groff
231 lines
7.0 KiB
Groff
.\" Manpage for bp.
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.\" Contact bruce@bruce-hill.com to correct errors or typos.
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.TH man 1 "Sep 12, 2020" "0.1" "bp manual page"
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.SH NAME
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bp \- Bruce's Parsing Expression Grammar tool
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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.B bp
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[\fI-h\fR|\fI--help\fR]
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[\fI-v\fR|\fI--verbose\fR]
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[\fI-e\fR|\fI--explain\fR]
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[\fI-j\fR|\fI--json\fR]
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[\fI-l\fR|\fI--list-files\fR]
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[\fI-i\fR|\fI--ignore-case\fR \fI<pattern>\fR]
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[\fI-I\fR|\fI--inplace\fR]
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[\fI-p\fR|\fI--pattern\fR \fI<pattern>\fR]
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[\fI-P\fR|\fI--pattern-string\fR \fI<string-pattern>\fR]
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[\fI-r\fR|\fI--replace\fR \fI<replacement>\fR]
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[\fI-g\fR|\fI--grammar\fR \fI<grammar file>\fR]
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[\fI-c\fR|\fI--conntext\fR \fI<N>\fR]
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\fI<pattern\fR
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[[--] \fI<input files...>\fR]
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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\fBbp\fR is a tool that matches parsing expression grammars using a custom syntax.
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.SH OPTIONS
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.B \-v\fR, \fB--verbose
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Print debugging information.
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.B \-e\fR, \fB--explain
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Print a visual explanation of the matches.
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.B \-j\fR, \fB--json
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Print a JSON list of the matches. (Pairs with \fB--verbose\fR for more detail)
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.B \-l\fR, \fB--list-files
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Print only the names of files containing matches instead of the matches themselves.
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.B \-i\fR, \fB--ignore-case
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Perform pattern matching case-insensitively.
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.B \-I\fR, \fB--inplace
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Perform filtering or replacement in-place (i.e. overwrite files with new content).
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.B \-r\fR, \fB--replace \fI<replacement>\fR
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Replace all occurrences of the main pattern with the given string.
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.B \-g\fR, \fB--grammar \fI<grammar file>\fR
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Load the grammar from the given file.
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.B \-c\fR, \fB--context \fI<N>\fR
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The number of lines of context to print. If \fI<N>\fR is 0, print only the
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exact text of the matches. If \fI<N>\fR is "all", print the entire file.
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Otherwise, if \fI<N>\fR is a positive integer, print the whole line on which
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matches occur, as well as the \fI<N-1>\fR lines before and after the match. The
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default value for this argument is 1 (print whole lines where matches occur).
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.B \--help
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Print the usage and exit.
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.B <string-pattern>
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The main pattern for bp to match. By default, this pattern is a string
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pattern (see the \fBSTRING PATTERNS\fR section below).
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.B <input files...>
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The input files to search. If no input files are provided and data was
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piped in, that data will be used instead. If neither are provided,
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\fBbp\fR will search through all files in the current directory and
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its subdirectories (recursively).
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.SH PATTERNS
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bp patterns are based off of a combination of Parsing Expression Grammars
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and regular expression syntax. The syntax is designed to map closely to
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verbal descriptions of the patterns, and prefix operators are preferred over
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suffix operators (as is common in regex syntax).
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Some patterns additionally have "multi-line" variants, which means that they
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include the newline character.
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.I <pat1> <pat2>
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A chain of patterns, pronounced \fI<pat1>\fB-then-\fI<pat2>\fR
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.I <pat1> \fB/\fI <pat2>\fR
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A series of ordered choices (if one pattern matches, the following patterns
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will not be attempted), pronounced \fI<pat1>\fB-or-\fI<pat2>\fR
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.B .
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\fBAny\fR character (excluding newline)
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.B ^
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\fBStart-of-a-line\fR
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.B ^^
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\fBStart-of-the-text\fR
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.B $
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\fBEnd-of-a-line\fR (does not include newline character)
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.B $$
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\fBEnd-of-the-text\fR
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.B _
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Zero or more \fBwhitespace\fR characters (specifically, spaces and tabs)
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.B __
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Zero or more \fBwhitespace-or-newline\fR characters
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.B `\fI<c>\fR
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The literal \fBcharacter-\fI<c>\fR
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.B `\fI<c1>\fB-\fI<c2>\fR
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The \fBcharacter-range-\fI<c1>\fB-to-\fI<c2>\fR
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.B `\fI<c1>\fB,\fI<c2>\fR
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The literal \fBcharacter-\fI<c1>\fB-or-\fI<c2>\fR (can include arbitrarily many
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comma-separated characters or character ranges).
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.B \\\\\fI<esc>\fR
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The \fBescape-sequence-\fI<esc>\fR (\fB\\n\fR, \fB\\x1F\fR, \fB\\033\fR, etc.)
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.B \\\\\fI<esc1>\fB-\fI<esc2>\fR
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The \fBescape-sequence-range-\fI<esc1>\fB-to-\fI<esc2>\fR
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.B !\fI<pat>\fR
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\fBNot-\fI<pat>\fR
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.B [\fI<pat>\fR]
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\fBMaybe-\fI<pat>\fR
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.B \fI<pat>\fR?
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\fI<pat>\fB-or-not\fR
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.B \fI<N> <pat>\fR
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.B \fI<MIN>\fB-\fI<MAX> <pat>\fR
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.B \fI<MIN>\fB+ \fI<pat>\fR
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\fI<MIN>\fB-to-\fI<MAX>\fB-\fI<pat>\fBs\fR (repetitions of a pattern)
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.B *\fI<pat>\fR
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\fBsome-\fI<pat>\fBs\fR
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.B +\fI<pat>\fR
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\fBat-least-one-\fI<pat>\fBs\fR
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.B \fI<repeating-pat>\fR \fB%\fI <sep>\fR
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\fI<repeating-pat>\fB-separated-by-\fI<sep>\fR (equivalent to \fI<pat>
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\fB0+(\fI<sep><pat>\fB)\fR)
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.B .. \fI<pat>\fR
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Any text \fBup-to-and-including\fR \fI<pat>\fR (excluding newline)
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.B .. \fI<pat>\fB % \fI<skip>\fR
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Any text \fBup-to-and-including\fR \fI<pat>\fR, but skipping over instances of \fI<skip>\fR.
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E.g. \fB`"..`" % (`\\.)
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.B <\fI<pat>\fR
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\fBJust-after-\fI<pat>\fR (lookbehind)
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.B >\fI<pat>\fR
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\fBJust-before-\fI<pat>\fR (lookahead)
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.B @\fI<pat>\fR
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\fBCapture-\fI<pat>\fR
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.B @\fI<name>\fB=\fI<pat>\fR
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\fBLet-\fI<name>\fB-equal-\fI<pat>\fR (named capture)
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.B \fI<pat>\fB => "\fI<replacement>\fB"
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\fBReplace-\fI<pat>\fB-with-\fI<replacement>\fR. Note: \fI<replacement>\fR should
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be a string, and it may contain references to captured values: \fB@0\fR
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(the whole of \fI<pat>\fR), \fB@1\fR (the first capture in \fI<pat>\fR),
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\fB@[\fIfoo\fR]\fR (the capture named \fIfoo\fR in \fI<pat>\fR), etc.
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.B \fI<pat1>\fB == \fI<pat2>\fR
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Will match only if \fI<pat1>\fR matches and \fI<pat2>\fR matches the text of \fI<pat1>\fR's
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match. Pronounced \fI<pat1>\fB-if-it-matches-\fI<pat2>\fR
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.B \fI<pat1>\fB != \fI<pat2>\fR
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Will match only if \fI<pat1>\fR matches and \fI<pat2>\fR doesn't match the text of
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\fI<pat1>\fR's match. Pronounced \fI<pat1>\fB-unless-it-matches-\fI<pat2>\fR
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.B \fI<pat1>\fB != \fI<pat2>\fR
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Will match only if \fI<pat1>\fR and \fI<pat2>\fR don't both match and have the
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exact same length. Pronounced \fI<pat1>\fB-assuming-it-doesn't-equal-\fI<pat2>\fR
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.B \fI<name>\fB:\fI<pat>\fR
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\fBDefine-\fI<name>\fB-to-mean-\fI<pat>\fR (pattern definition)
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.B |
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This pattern matches the indentation at the beginning of a line that has the
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same indentation as the line before (or zero indentation on the first line).
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.B #( \fI<comment>\fR )#
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A block comment (can be nested)
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.B # \fI<comment>\fR
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A line comment
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.SH STRING PATTERNS
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One of the most common use cases for pattern matching tools is matching plain,
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literal strings, or strings that are primarily plain strings, with one or two
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patterns. \fBbp\fR is designed around this fact. The default mode for bp
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patterns is "string pattern mode". In string pattern mode, all characters
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are interpreted literally except for the backslash (\fB\\\fR), which may be
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followed by a bp pattern (see the \fBPATTERNS\fR section above). Optionally,
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the bp pattern may be terminated by a semicolon (\fB;\fR).
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.SH EXAMPLES
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.TP
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.B
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ls | bp foo
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Find files containing the string "foo" (a string pattern)
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.TP
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.B
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ls | bp '.c\\$' -r '.h'
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Find files ending with ".c" and replace the extension with ".h"
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.TP
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.B
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bp -p '"foobar"==id parens' my_file.py
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Find the literal string \fB"foobar"\fR, assuming it's a complete identifier,
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followed by a pair of matching parentheses in the file \fImy_file.py\fR
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.TP
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.B
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bp -g html -p html-element -D matching-tag=a foo.html
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Using the \fIhtml\fR grammar, find all \fIhtml-element\fRs matching
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the tag \fIa\fR in the file \fIfoo.html\fR
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.SH AUTHOR
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Bruce Hill (bruce@bruce-hill.com)
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