I am running Windows 7 and (have to) use Turbo Grep (Borland something) to search in a file. I have 2 version of this file, one encoded in UTF-8 and one in ANSI.
If I run the following grep on the ANSI file, I get the expected results, but I get no results with the same statement on the UTF-8 file:
grep -ni "[äöü]" myfile.txt
[-n for line numbers, -i for ignoring cases]
The Turbo Grep Version is :
Turbo GREP 5.6 Copyright (c) 1992-2010 Embarcadero Technologies, Inc.
Syntax: GREP [-rlcnvidzewoqhu] searchstring file[s] or @filelist
GREP ? for help
Help for this command lists:
Options are one or more option characters preceded by "-", and optionally
followed by "+" (turn option on), or "-" (turn it off). The default is "+".
-r+ Regular expression search -l- File names only
-c- match Count only -n- Line numbers
-v- Non-matching lines only -i- Ignore case
-d- Search subdirectories -z- Verbose
-e Next argument is searchstring -w- Word search
-o- UNIX output format Default set: [0-9A-Z_]
-q- Quiet: supress normal output
-h- Supress display of filename
-u xxx Create a copy of grep named 'xxx' with current options set as default
A regular expression is one or more occurrences of: One or more characters optionally enclosed in quotes. The following symbols are treated specially: ^ start of line $ end of line . any character \ quote next character * match zero or more + match one or more [aeiou0-9] match a, e, i, o, u, and 0 thru 9 ; [^aeiou0-9] match anything but a, e, i, o, u, and 0 thru 9
Is there a problem with the encoding of these charactes in UTF-8? Might there be a problem with Turbo Grep and UTF-8?
Thanks in advance