rattinngrep
Rattinngrep is a neologism used in information science to describe a two-stage approach to searching text data that combines a rapid broad scan with a subsequent precise extraction. The term is a portmanteau of “rattle” and “grep” and has appeared in informal discussions among developers and data scientists since the late 2010s. It is not a formal standard, but it is used to describe workflows that tolerate noise through staged filtering before exact pattern matching.
In practice, the method proceeds in two passes. The first pass, the “rattle,” uses loose or high-coverage
Applications include log analysis, security auditing, data wrangling, and research involving large text corpora with noise.
See also: grep, ripgrep, multi-pass parsing, staged search. There are no formal standards for rattinngrep as