Gnu sed: Difference between revisions

From wikinotes
Line 32: Line 32:


By default, all commands operate on every line.<br>
By default, all commands operate on every line.<br>
You can use '''addresses''' to limit the scope of a command.
You can use [https://man.archlinux.org/man/core/sed/sed.1.en#Addresses addresses] to limit the scope of a command.


<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">

Revision as of 14:00, 16 October 2021

Gnu sed performs search/replace within stdin or files.
See also bsd sed.

Documentation

man sed https://man.archlinux.org/man/core/sed/sed.1.en

Overview

sed lets you manipulate text streams using commands

example commands:

# 's' command search/replaces text
echo 'foo_bar_baz' | sed 's/bar/BAR/g'
> foo_BAR_gaz

# 'i'/'a' commands prepend/append newlines to each line
echo 'foo\nbar\nbaz' | sed 'i \my newline'
> my newline
> foo
> my newline
> bar
> my newline
> baz

By default, all commands operate on every line.
You can use addresses to limit the scope of a command.

# Limit scope of 'i' command to lines matching /bar/
echo 'foo\nbar\nbaz\bat' | sed '/bar/i \newline'
> foo
> newline
> bar
> baz
> bat

# Limit scope of 'i' to an address-range
# ',' between two addresses selects all lines in between the matches (inclusively)
echo '1\n2\n3\n4\n5\n6' | sed '/3/,/5/i \newline'
> 1
> 2
> newline
> 3
> newline
> 4
> newline
> 5
> 6

Usage

# Replace 'aaa' with 'bbb'
cat echo "aaa_stuff_aaa" \
    | sed 's_aaa_bbb_g'


# Regex
cat echo "aaa_stuff_aaa" \
    | sed -E 's_[a]*_b_g'

# Group matching (\2 is a variable that refers to the
# second match group. In this case, 'stuff'
cat echo "aaa_stuff_aaa" \
    | sed -E 's_\([a]*\)\(stuff\)_\2\n'


# Replace file contents
sed -i"bak"  "s_aaa_bbb_g" /path/to/file