2024-04-02 21:19:20 +02:00
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---
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tags:
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- bash
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- shell
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- scripting
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- arguments
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- file
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- editor
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- edit
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- ed
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- sed
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---
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2023-07-05 11:10:03 +02:00
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2024-04-02 21:19:20 +02:00
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# Editing files via scripts with ed
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2023-07-05 11:10:03 +02:00
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## Why ed?
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Like `sed`, `ed` is a line editor. However, if you try to change file
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contents with `sed`, and the file is open elsewhere and read by some
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process, you will find out that GNU `sed` and its `-i` option will not
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allow you to edit the file. There are circumstances where you may need
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that, e.g. editing active and open files, the lack of GNU, or other
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`sed`, with \"in-place\" option available.
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Why `ed`?
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2024-03-30 20:09:26 +01:00
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- maybe your `sed` doesn't support in-place edit
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2023-07-05 11:10:03 +02:00
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- maybe you need to be as portable as possible
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- maybe you need to really edit in-file (and not create a new file
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like GNU `sed`)
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- last but not least: standard `ed` has very good editing and
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addressing possibilities, compared to standard `sed`
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2024-03-30 20:09:26 +01:00
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Don't get me wrong, this is **not** meant as anti-`sed` article! It's
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2023-07-05 11:10:03 +02:00
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just meant to show you another way to do the job.
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## Commanding ed
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Since `ed` is an interactive text editor, it reads and executes commands
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that come from `stdin`. There are several ways to feed our commands to
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ed:
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**[Pipelines]{.underline}**
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echo '<ED-COMMANDS>' | ed <FILE>
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To inject the needed newlines, etc. it may be easier to use the builtin
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command, `printf` (\"help printf\"). Shown here as an example Bash
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function to prefix text to file content:
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# insertHead "$text" "$file"
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insertHead() {
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printf '%s\n' H 1i "$1" . w | ed -s "$2"
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}
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**[Here-strings]{.underline}**
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ed <FILE> <<< '<ED-COMMANDS>'
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**[Here-documents]{.underline}**
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ed <FILE> <<EOF
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<ED-COMMANDS>
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EOF
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Which one you prefer is your choice. I will use the here-strings, since
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it looks best here IMHO.
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There are other ways to provide input to `ed`. For example, process
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substitution. But these should be enough for daily needs.
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Since `ed` wants commands separated by newlines, I\'ll use a special
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Bash quoting method, the C-like strings `$'TEXT'`, as it can interpret a
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set of various escape sequences and special characters. I\'ll use the
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`-s` option to make it less verbose.
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## The basic interface
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Check the `ed` manpage for details
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Similar to `vi` or `vim`, `ed` has a \"command mode\" and an
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\"interactive mode\". For non-interactive use, the command mode is the
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usual choice.
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Commands to `ed` have a simple and regular structure: zero, one, or two
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addresses followed by a single-character command, possibly followed by
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parameters to that command. These addresses specify one or more lines in
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the text buffer. Every command that requires addresses has default
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addresses, so the addresses can often be omitted.
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The line addressing is relative to the *current line*. If the edit
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buffer is not empty, the initial value for the *current line* shall be
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the last line in the edit buffer, otherwise zero. Generally, the
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*current line* is the last line affected by a command. All addresses can
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only address single lines, not blocks of lines!
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Line addresses or commands using *regular expressions* interpret POSIX
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Basic Regular Expressions (BRE). A null BRE is used to reference the
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most recently used BRE. Since `ed` addressing is only for single lines,
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no RE can ever match a newline.
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## Debugging your ed scripts
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By default, `ed` is not very talkative and will simply print a \"?\"
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when an error occurs. Interactively you can use the `h` command to get a
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short message explaining the last error. You can also turn on a mode
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that makes `ed` automatically print this message with the `H` command.
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It is a good idea to always add this command at the beginning of your ed
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scripts:
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bash > ed -s file <<< $'H\n,df'
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?
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script, line 2: Invalid command suffix
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While working on your script, you might make errors and destroy your
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file, you might be tempted to try your script doing something like:
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# Works, but there is better
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# copy my original file
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cp file file.test
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# try my script on the file
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ed -s file.test <<< $'H\n<ed commands>\nw'
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# see the results
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cat file.test
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There is a much better way though, you can use the ed command `p` to
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print the file, now your testing would look like:
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ed -s file <<< $'H\n<ed commands>\n,p'
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the `,` (comma) in front of the `p` command is a shortcut for `1,$`
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which defines an address range for the first to the last line, `,p` thus
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means print the whole file, after it has been modified. When your script
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runs sucessfully, you only have to replace the `,p` by a `w`.
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2024-03-30 19:22:45 +01:00
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Of course, even if the file is not modified by the `p` command, **it's
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2023-07-05 11:10:03 +02:00
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always a good idea to have a backup copy!**
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## Editing your files
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Most of these things can be done with `sed`. But there are also things
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that can't be done in `sed` or can only be done with very complex code.
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2023-07-05 11:10:03 +02:00
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### Simple word substitutions
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Like `sed`, `ed` also knows the common `s/FROM/TO/` command, and it can
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also take line-addresses. **If no substitution is made on the addressed
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lines, it's considered an error.**
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#### Substitutions through the whole file
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ed -s test.txt <<< $',s/Windows(R)-compatible/POSIX-conform/g\nw'
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[Note:]{.underline} The comma as single address operator is an alias for
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`1,$` (\"all lines\").
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#### Substitutions in specific lines
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On a line containing `fruits`, do the substitution:
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ed -s test.txt <<< $'/fruits/s/apple/banana/g\nw'
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On the 5th line after the line containing `fruits`, do the substitution:
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ed -s test.txt <<< $'/fruits/+5s/apple/banana/g\nw'
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### Block operations
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#### Delete a block of text
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The simple one is a well-known (by position) block of text:
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# delete lines number 2 to 4 (2, 3, 4)
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ed -s test.txt <<< $'2,5d\nw'
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This deletes all lines matching a specific regular expression:
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# delete all lines matching foobar
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ed -s test.txt <<< $'g/foobar/d\nw'
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g/regexp/ applies the command following it to all the lines matching the
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regexp
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#### Move a block of text
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\...using the `m` command: `<ADDRESS> m <TARGET-ADDRESS>`
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2024-03-30 20:09:26 +01:00
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This is definitely something that can't be done easily with sed.
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# moving lines 5-9 to the end of the file
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ed -s test.txt <<< $'5,9m$\nw'
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# moving lines 5-9 to line 3
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ed -s test.txt <<< $'5,9m3\nw'
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#### Copy a block of text
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\...using the `t` command: `<ADDRESS> t <TARGET-ADDRESS>`
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You use the `t` command just like you use the `m` (move) command.
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# make a copy of lines 5-9 and place it at the end of the file
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ed -s test.txt <<< $'5,9t$\nw'
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# make a copy of lines 5-9 and place it at line 3
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ed -s test.txt <<< $'5,9t3\nw'
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#### Join all lines
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\...but leave the final newline intact. This is done by an extra
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command: `j` (join).
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ed -s file <<< $'1,$j\nw'
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2024-03-30 20:09:26 +01:00
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Compared with two other methods (using `tr` or `sed`), you don't have
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to delete all newlines and manually add one at the end.
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### File operations
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#### Insert another file
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How do you insert another file? As with `sed`, you use the `r` (read)
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command. That inserts another file at the line before the last line (and
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prints the result to stdout - `,p`):
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ed -s FILE1 <<< $'$-1 r FILE2\n,p'
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2024-03-30 19:22:45 +01:00
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To compare, here's a possible `sed` solution which must use Bash
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arithmetic and the external program `wc`:
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sed "$(($(wc -l < FILE1)-1))r FILE2" FILE1
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# UPDATE here's one which uses GNU sed's "e" parameter for the s-command
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# it executes the commands found in pattern space. I'll take that as a
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# security risk, but well, sometimes GNU > security, you know...
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sed '${h;s/.*/cat FILE2/e;G}' FILE1
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Another approach, in two invocations of sed, that avoids the use of
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external commands completely:
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sed $'${s/$/\\n-||-/;r FILE2\n}' FILE1 | sed '0,/-||-/{//!h;N;//D};$G'
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## Pitfalls
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### ed is not sed
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ed and sed might look similar, but the same command(s) might act
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differently:
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**\_\_ /foo/d \_\_**
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In sed /foo/d will delete all lines matching foo, in ed the commands are
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not repeated on each line so this command will search the next line
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matching foo and delete it. If you want to delete all lines matching
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foo, or do a subsitution on all lines matching foo you have to tell ed
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about it with the g (global) command:
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echo $'1\n1\n3' > file
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#replace all lines matching 1 by "replacement"
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ed -s file <<< $'g/1/s/1/replacement/\n,p'
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#replace the first line matching 1 by "replacement"
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#(because it starts searching from the last line)
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ed -s file <<< $'s/1/replacement/\n,p'
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**\_\_ an error stops the script \_\_**
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2024-03-30 19:22:45 +01:00
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You might think that it's not a problem and that the same thing happens
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with sed and you\'re right, with the exception that if ed does not find
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a pattern it's an error, while sed just continues with the next line.
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For instance, let's say that you want to change foo to bar on the first
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line of the file and add something after the next line, ed will stop if
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it cannot find foo on the first line, sed will continue.
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#Gnu sed version
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sed -e '1s/foo/bar/' -e '$a\something' file
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#First ed version, does nothing if foo is not found on the first line:
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ed -s file <<< $'H\n1s/foo/bar/\na\nsomething\n.\nw'
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If you want the same behaviour you can use g/foo/ to trick ed. g/foo/
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will apply the command on all lines matching foo, thus the substitution
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will succeed and ed will not produce an error when foo is not found:
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#Second version will add the line with "something" even if foo is not found
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ed -s file <<< $'H\n1g/foo/s/foo/bar/\na\nsomething\n.\nw'
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In fact, even a substitution that fails after a g/ / command does not
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seem to cause an error, i.e. you can use a trick like g/./s/foo/bar/ to
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attempt the substitution on all non blank lines
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### here documents
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**\_\_ shell parameters are expanded \_\_**
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2024-03-30 20:09:26 +01:00
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If you don't quote the delimiter, \$ has a special meaning. This sounds
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obvious but it's easy to forget this fact when you use addresses like
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\$-1 or commands like \$a. Either quote the \$ or the delimiter:
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#fails
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ed -s file << EOF
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$a
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last line
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.
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w
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EOF
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#ok
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ed -s file << EOF
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\$a
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last line
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.
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w
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EOF
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#ok again
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ed -s file << 'EOF'
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$a
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last line
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.
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w
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EOF
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**\_\_ \".\" is not a command \_\_**
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The . used to terminate the command \"a\" must be the only thing on the
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line. take care if you indent the commands:
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#ed doesn't care about the spaces before the commands, but the . must be the only thing on the line:
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ed -s file << EOF
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a
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my content
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.
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w
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EOF
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## Simulate other commands
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Keep in mind that in all the examples below, the entire file will be
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read into memory.
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### A simple grep
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ed -s file <<< 'g/foo/p'
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# equivalent
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ed -s file <<< 'g/foo/'
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2024-04-01 06:10:32 +02:00
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The name `grep` is derived from the notaion `g/RE/p` (global => regular
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expression => print). ref
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<http://www.catb.org/~esr/jargon/html/G/grep.html>
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### wc -l
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Since the default for the `ed` \"print line number\" command is the last
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line, a simple `=` (equal sign) will print this line number and thus the
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number of lines of the file:
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ed -s file <<< '='
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### cat
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2024-03-30 19:22:45 +01:00
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Yea, it's a joke\...
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2023-07-05 11:10:03 +02:00
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ed -s file <<< $',p'
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\...but a similar thing to `cat` showing line-endings and escapes can be
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done with the `list` command (l):
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ed -s file <<< $',l'
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FIXME to be continued
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## Links
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Reference:
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- [Gnu ed](http://www.gnu.org/software/ed/manual/ed_manual.html) - if
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we had to guess, you\'re probably using this one.
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- POSIX
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[ed](http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/ed.html#tag_20_38),
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[ex](http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/ex.html#tag_20_40),
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and
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[vi](http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/vi.html#tag_20_152)
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- <http://sdf.lonestar.org/index.cgi?tutorials/ed> - ed cheatsheet on
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sdf.org
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Misc info / tutorials:
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- [How can I replace a string with another string in a variable, a
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stream, a file, or in all the files in a
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directory?](http://mywiki.wooledge.org/BashFAQ/021) - BashFAQ
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- <http://wolfram.schneider.org/bsd/7thEdManVol2/edtut/edtut.pdf> -
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Old but still relevant ed tutorial.
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