Difference between revisions of "Sed"

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TODO: Easily available on google
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'''Sed''' is an extremely handy commandline *nix tool. Refer to its manual page for a more extensive overview of its capabilities.
 
'''Sed''' is an extremely handy commandline *nix tool. Refer to its manual page for a more extensive overview of its capabilities.
  
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[[Category:Commandline *nix]]
 
[[Category:Commandline *nix]]
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[[Category:Pending deletion]]

Revision as of 06:40, 3 January 2018

TODO: Easily available on google

Sed is an extremely handy commandline *nix tool. Refer to its manual page for a more extensive overview of its capabilities.

Uses

Substitution

The most popular command of sed is the s command for substitution. To use the command, type an s, followed by a delimiting character, followed by a regular expression to look for, followed by the delimiting character, followed by an expression with which to replace what was found, followed by a final delimiting character. (/ is the conventional delimiting character and potentially required by some versions of sed. GNU sed can take any character however, and when URLs or paths are involved, % is often a handy choice to lessen the amount of escaping required.)

$ echo "Never let schooling interfere with your education." | sed 's/schooling/video games/'
Never let video games interfere with your education.

Groups can be useful in the replacement portion. Use the -r flag if you don't want to escape the initial grouping parenthesis. The -e flag allows for multiple expressions to be evaluated.

$ echo "Never let schooling interfere with your education." | sed -re 's/(schooling)/costly \1/' -e 's/(education)/invaluable \1/'
Never let costly schooling interfere with your invaluable education.

Examples