On Thu, May 22, 2014 at 5:49 PM, Jeremy Nicoll - ml get_iplayer <[email protected]> wrote:
> The results seem to be those of > > $ ./get_iplayer ^Coast > > which makes me wonder if ":" has some meaning in whatever command shell > you're using? Ok - yes - that makes sense - thanks - I don't often run manual searches so I forgot to quote the search regex - it was splitting the search on spaces into three values. Running again (as I intended) with quotes I get the same results as the PVR search (no programmes found) - truncated verbose output below: > $ ./get_iplayer "^Coast\: Coast Australia$" --verbose > get_iplayer v2.86, Copyright (C) 2008-2010 Phil Lewis > INFO: Search args: '^Coast\: Coast Australia$' > INFO: Got 3459 file cache entries for tv > INFO: Search term '^Coast\: Coast Australia$' is a substring > DEBUG: Search download_regex = ^Coast\: Coast Australia$ > INFO: 0 Matching Programmes The same command without the escaped ":" also finds no programmes (truncated verbose output below): > $ ./get_iplayer "^Coast: Coast Australia$" --verbose > INFO: Search args: '^Coast: Coast Australia$' > INFO: Got 3459 file cache entries for tv > INFO: Search term '^Coast: Coast Australia$' is a substring > DEBUG: Search download_regex = ^Coast: Coast Australia$ > INFO: 0 Matching Programmes Which leaves me back where I started - wondering why the search (via PVR or manual, with or without escaped colon) is not finding the available programmes. _______________________________________________ get_iplayer mailing list [email protected] http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/get_iplayer

