The VWNC mailing list archive, and others at http://www.parcplace.net/lists/, has a broken external link to the “help on patterns”. I searched a bit online, and found what seems to be approximately the pattern support for the list server’s (ancient?) version of Glimpse:
http://nyjm.albany.edu/search/glimpsehelp.html or
http://web.archive.org/web/19980111074249/http://glimpse.cs.arizona.edu/glimpsehelp.html#sect7
Could this info (or a more exact version of it) be made a local page on parcplace.net, and the “help on patterns” link updated?
Thanks,
Steve
PATTERNS
glimpse supports a large variety of patterns, including simple strings, strings with classes of characters, sets of strings, wild cards, and regular expressions.
Strings
Strings are any sequence of characters, including the special symbols `^' for beginning of line and `$' for end of line. The following special characters ( `$', `^', `*', `[', `^', `|', `(', `)', `!', and `\' ) as well as the following meta characters special to glimpse (and agrep): `;', `,', `#', `<', `>', `-', and `.', should be preceded by `\' if they are to be matched as regular characters. For example, \^abc\ corresponds to the string ^abc\, whereas ^abc corresponds to the string abc at the beginning of a line.
Classes of characters
a list of characters inside [] (in order) corresponds to any character from the list. For example, [a-ho-z] is any character between a and h or between o and z. The symbol `^' inside [] complements the list. For example, [^i-n] denote any character in the character set except character `i' to `n'. The symbol `^' thus has two meanings, but this is consistent with egrep. The symbol `.' (don't care) stands for any symbol (except for the newline symbol).
Boolean operations
Glimpse supports an `AND' operation denoted by the symbol `;' an `OR' operation denoted by the symbol `,', or any combination. For example, glimpse `pizza;cheeseburger' will output all lines containing both patterns. glimpse -F `gnu;\.c$' `define;DEFAULT' will output all lines containing both `define' and `DEFAULT' (anywhere in the line, not necessarily in order) in files whose name contains `gnu' and ends with .c. glimpse `{political,computer};science' will match `political science' or `science of computers'.
Wild cards
The symbol `#' is used to denote a sequence of any number (including 0) of arbitrary characters. The symbol # is equivalent to .* in egrep. In fact, .* will work too, because it is a valid regular expression (see below), but unless this is part of an actual regular expression, # will work faster. (Currently glimpse is experiencing some problems with #.)
Combination of exact and approximate matching Any pattern inside angle brackets <> must match the text exactly even if the match is with errors. For example, <mathemat>ics matches mathematical with one error (replacing the last s with an a), but mathe<matics> does not match mathematical no matter how many errors are allowed. (This option is buggy at the moment.)
Regular expressions
Since the index is word based, a regular expression must match words that appear in the index for glimpse to find it. Glimpse first strips the regular expression from all non-alphabetic characters, and searches the index for all remaining words. It then applies the regular expression matching algorithm to the files found in the index. For example, glimpse `abc.*xyz' will search the index for all files that contain both `abc' and `xyz', and then search directly for `abc.*xyz' in those files. (If you use glimpse -w `abc.*xyz', then `abcxyz' will not be found, because glimpse will think that abc and xyz need to be matches to whole words.) The syntax of regular expressions in glimpse is in general the same as that for agrep. The union operation `|', Kleene closure `*', and parentheses () are all supported. Currently `+' is not supported. Regular expressions are currently limited to approximately 30 characters (generally excluding meta characters). Some options (-d, -w, -t, -x, -D, -I, -S) do not currently work with regular expressions. The maximal number of errors for regular expressions that use `*' or `|' is 4.