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Archive-name: editor-faq/sed
Posting-Frequency: bimonthly
Last-modified: 1999/10/16
Version: 012
URL: http://www.cornerstonemag.com/sed/sedfaq.html
Maintainer: Eric Pement <[email protected]>

                            THE SED FAQ

                 Frequently Asked Questions about
                      sed, the stream editor

CONTENTS:

1. GENERAL INFORMATION
1.1. Introduction - How this FAQ is organized
1.2. Latest version of the sed FAQ
1.3. FAQ revision information
1.4. How do I add a question/answer to the sed FAQ?
1.5. FAQ abbreviations
1.6. Credits and acknowledgements
1.7. Standard disclaimers

2. BASIC SED
2.1. What is sed?
2.2. What versions of sed are there, and where can I get them?

2.2.1. Free versions

2.2.1.1. Unix platforms
2.2.1.2. OS/2
2.2.1.3. Microsoft Windows (3.1, NT, Win95)
2.2.1.4. MS-DOS
2.2.1.5. CP/M

2.2.2. Shareware and Commercial versions

2.2.2.1. Unix platforms
2.2.2.2. OS/2
2.2.2.3. Windows NT, Windows 95
2.2.2.4. MS-DOS

2.3. Where can I learn to use sed?

2.3.1. Books
2.3.2. Mailing list
2.3.3. Tutorials, electronic text
2.3.4. General web and ftp sites

3. TECHNICAL
3.1. More detailed explanation of basic sed
3.2. Common one-line sed scripts. How do I . . . ?

     - double/triple-space a file?
     - convert DOS/Unix newlines?
     - delete leading/trailing spaces?
     - do substitutions on all/certain lines?
     - delete consecutive blank lines?
     - delete blank lines at the top/end of the file?

3.3. Addressing and address ranges
3.4. [reserved]
3.5. [reserved]
3.6. [reserved]
3.7. GNU/POSIX extensions to regular expressions

4. EXAMPLES
4.1. How do I perform a case-insensitive search?
4.2. How do I make changes in only part of a file?
4.3. How do I change only the first occurrence of a pattern?
4.4. How do I make substitutions in every file in a directory, or in a
    complete directory tree?

4.4.1 - Perl solution
4.4.2 - Unix solution
4.4.3 - DOS solution

4.5. How do I parse a comma-delimited data file?
4.6. How do I insert a newline into the RHS of a substitution?
4.7. How do I represent control-codes or non-printable characters?
4.8. How do I read environment variables with sed?

4.8.1. - on Unix platforms
4.8.2. - on MS-DOS or 4DOS platforms

4.9. How do I export or pass variables back into the environment?

4.9.1. - on Unix platforms
4.9.2. - on MS-DOS or 4DOS platforms

4.10. How do I handle shell quoting in sed?
4.11. How do I delete a block of text if the block contains a certain
     regular expression?
4.12. How do I locate/print a paragraph of text if the paragraph
     contains a certain regular expression?
4.13. How do I delete a block of _specific_ consecutive lines?
4.14. How do I read (insert/add) a file at the top of a textfile?
4.15. How do I address all the lines between RE1 and RE2, excluding
     the lines themselves?
4.16. How do I put "/some/path/here" into the LHS of a substitution?
4.17. How do I replace "C:\SOME\DOS\PATH" in a substitution?
4.18. How do I convert files with toggle characters, like +this+, to
     look like [i]this[/i]?
4.19. How do I delete only the first occurrence of a pattern?
4.20. How do I commify a string of numbers?

5. WHY ISN'T THIS WORKING?
5.1. Why don't my variables like $var get expanded in my sed script?
5.2. I'm using 'p' to print, but I have duplicate lines sometimes.
5.3. Why does my DOS version of sed process a file part-way through
    and then quit?
5.4. My RE isn't matching/deleting what I want it to. (Or, "Greedy vs.
    stingy pattern matching")
5.5. What is CSDPMI*B.ZIP and why do I need it?
5.6. Where are the man pages for GNU sed?
5.7. How do I tell what version of sed I am using?
5.8. Does sed issue an exit code?
5.9. The 'r' command isn't inserting the file into the text.
5.10. Why can't I match 2 or more lines using the \n command?

6. OTHER ISSUES
6.1. I have a problem that stumps me. Where can I get help?
6.2. How does sed compare with awk, perl, and other utilities?
6.3. When should I use sed?
6.4. When should I NOT use sed?
6.5. When should I ignore sed and use Awk or Perl instead?
6.6. Known limitations among sed versions
6.7. Known bugs among sed versions
6.8. Known incompatibilities between sed versions

6.8.1. Issuing commands from the command line
6.8.2. Using comments (prefixed by the '#' sign)
6.8.3. Special syntax in REs
6.8.4. Word boundaries
6.8.5. Range addressing with GNU sed and HHsed

------------------------------

1. GENERAL INFORMATION

1.1. Introduction - How this FAQ is organized

  This FAQ is organized to answer common (and some uncommon)
  questions about sed, quickly. If you see a term or abbreviation in
  the examples that seems unclear, see if the term is defined in
  section 1.5. If not, write us and we'll try to clarify it for the
  next version of the FAQ.

1.2. Latest version of the sed FAQ

  The newest version of the sed FAQ is usually here:

     http://www.cornerstonemag.com/sed/sedfaq.html
     http://www.cornerstonemag.com/sed/sedfaq.txt
     http://www.dbnet.ece.ntua.gr/~george/sed/sedfaq.html
     http://www.dbnet.ece.ntua.gr/~george/sed/sedfaq.txt
     http://www.ptug.org/sed/sedfaq.html
     http://www.faqs.org/faqs/editor-faq/sed
     ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/faqs/editor-faq/sed

1.3. FAQ revision information

  Changes to this FAQ since the last version are indicated by a
  vertical bar (|) placed in column 78 of the affected lines. To
  remove the vertical bars (use double quotes for MS-DOS):

     sed 's/  *|$//' sedfaq.txt > sedfaq2.txt

  In the HTML version, vertical bars do not appear. New or altered
  portions of the FAQ are indicated by printing in dark blue type.

  In the text version, words needing emphasis may be surrounded by
  the underscore '_' or the asterisk '*'. In the HTML version, these
  are changed to italics and boldface, respectively.

1.4. How do I add a question/answer to the sed FAQ?

  Word your question succinctly and clearly, and e-mail it Eric              |
  Pement <[email protected]>, indicating your proposed addition to           |
  the FAQ. We'll post it on the sed-users mailing list (see section          |
  2.3.2, below) and discuss it there. If some agreement, your                |
  contribution will be included in the next edition of the FAQ.              |

1.5. FAQ abbreviations:

  files = one or more filenames, separated by whitespace
  RE  = Regular Expressions supported by sed
  LHS = the left-hand side ("find" part) of "s/find/repl/" command
  RHS = the right-hand side ("replace" part) of "s/find/repl/" cmd.

  files: "files" stands for one or more filenames entered on the             |
  command line. The names may include any wildcards your shell               |
  understands (such as ``zork*'' or ``Aug[4-9].let''). Sed will              |
  process each filename passed to it by the shell.                           |

  RE: For the syntax of Basic Regular Expressions (BREs), type "man
  ed" and read the documentation for regular expressions. A technical
  description of BREs from the Single UNIX Specification, Version 2,
  by The Open Group (joint committee on Unix) is available online at
  <http://www.rdg.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/7908799/xbd/re.html#tag_007_003>.
  Sed normally supports BREs plus '\n' to match a newline in the
  pattern space and '\xREx' as equivalent to '/RE/', where 'x' is any
  character other than another backslash.

  Some versions of sed support supersets of BREs, or "extended
  regular expressions", which offer additional metacharacters for
  increased flexibility. For additional information on extended REs
  in GNU sed, see sections 3.7 ("GNU/POSIX extensions to regular
  expressions") and 6.8.3 ("Special syntax in REs"), below.

  LHS: In sed, the LHS may be a string literal (e.g., "foo") or any
  valid regular expression supported by your version of sed. Some
  versions of sed support things like \t for TAB, \r for carriage
  return, \xNN for direct entry of hex codes, etc. Other versions of
  sed do not support this syntax.

  RHS: The right-hand side (the replacement part in s/find/replace/)
  is almost always a string literal, with no interpolation of the
  metacharacters (.), (^), ($), ([), or \(...\) -- with the following
  exceptions:  \1 through \9 are replaced by the corresponding group,
  if grouping \(...\) was used in the LHS.  If no grouping was used
  in the LHS, then \1 through \9 are replaced by literal digits. '&'
  is replaced by the entire expression matched on the LHS. To enter a
  literal ampersand or backslash in the RHS, type '\&' or '\\'.

1.6. Credits and acknowledgements

  My time spent messing with sed, composing this FAQ, and generally          |
  doing text manipulation which is unrelated to my job description is        |
  due to the kind tolerance of the Christian magazine I work for,            |
  Cornerstone. So, let me say thanks to the mag staff for indulging          |
  this somewhat unusual "ministry." Please visit this site:                  |

     http://www.cornerstonemag.com                                           |

  Many of the ideas for this FAQ were taken from the Awk FAQ
     http://www.faqs.org/faqs/computer-lang/awk/faq/
     ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/comp.lang.awk/faq

  and from the Perl FAQ
     http://www.perl.com/perl/FAQ
     http://www.perl.com/CPAN/doc/FAQs/FAQ/html/index.html
     ftp://ftp.cdrom.com/pub/perl/CPAN/doc/FAQs/FAQ

  The following individuals have contributed significantly to this
  document, and have provided input and wording suggestions for
  questions, answers, and script examples. Credit goes to these
  contributors (in alphabetical order by last name):

     Al Aab <af137@freenet*toronto*on*ca>
     Yiorgos Adamopoulos <adamo@softlab*ece*ntua*gr>
     Walter Briscoe <walter@wbriscoe*demon*co*uk>
     Jim Dennis <jadestar@rahul*net>
     Carlos Duarte <cdua@algos*inesc*pt>
     Otavio Exel <oexel@economatica*com*br>
     Mark Katz <mark@ispc001*demon*co*uk>
     Eric Pement <epement@jpusa*chi*il*us>
     Greg Pfeiffer <gpfeiffe@yahoo*com>
     Ken Pizzini <ken@halcyon*com>
     Niall Smart <nialls@euristix*ie>
     Simon Taylor <staylor@unisolve*com*au>
     Greg Ubben <gsu@romulus*ncsc*mil>

  Note: Periods (.) are replaced with asterisks (*) to foil e-mail
  harvesting and spam-bots.

1.7. Standard disclaimers

  While a serious attempt has been made to ensure the accuracy of the
  information presented herein, the contributors and maintainers of
  this document do not claim the absence of errors and make no
  warranties on the information provided. If you notice any errors or
  ambiguous wording, please notify the FAQ maintainer so it can be
  fixed for the next edition.

------------------------------

2. BASIC SED

2.1. What is sed?

  "sed" stands for Stream EDitor. Sed is a non-interactive editor,
  written by the late Lee E. McMahon in 1973 or 1974. A brief history
  of sed's origins may be found in an early history of the Unix
  tools, at <http://www.columbia.edu/~rh120/ch106.x09>.

  Instead of the user altering a file interactively by moving the
  cursor on the screen (like with Word Perfect), the user sends a
  script of editing instructions to sed, plus the name of the file to
  edit (or the text to be edited may come as output from a pipe). In
  this sense, sed works like a filter -- deleting, inserting and
  changing characters, words, and lines of text. Its range of
  activity goes from small, simple changes to very complex ones.

  Sed reads its input from stdin (Unix shorthand for "standard
  input," i.e., the console) or from files (or both), and sends the
  results to stdout ("standard output," normally the console or
  screen). Most people use sed first for its substitution features.
  Sed is often used as a find-and-replace tool.

     sed 's/Glenn/Harold/g' oldfile >newfile

  will replace every occurrence of "Glenn" with the word "Harold",
  wherever it occurs in the file. The "find" portion is a regular
  expression ("RE"), which can be a simple word or may contain
  special characters to allow greater flexibility (for example, to
  prevent "Glenn" from also matching "Glennon").

  My very first use of sed was to add 8 spaces to the left side of a
  file, so when I printed it, the printing wouldn't begin at the
  absolute left edge of a piece of paper.

     sed 's/^/        /' myfile >newfile   # my first sed script
     sed 's/^/        /' myfile | lp       # my next sed script

  Then I learned that sed could display only one paragraph of a file,
  beginning at the phrase "and where it came" and ending at the
  phrase "for all people". My script looked like this:

     sed -n '/and where it came/,/for all people/p' myfile

  Sed's normal behavior is to print (i.e., display or show on screen)
  the entire file, including the parts that haven't been altered,
  unless you use the -n switch. The "-n" stands for "no output". This
  switch is almost always used in conjunction with a 'p' command
  somewhere, which says to print only the sections of the file that
  have been specified. The -n switch with the 'p' command allow for
  parts of a file to be printed (i.e., sent to the console).

  Next, I found that sed could show me only (say) lines 12-18 of a
  file and not show me the rest. This was very handy when I needed to
  review only part of a long file and I didn't want to alter it.

     sed -n 12,18p myfile   # the 'p' stands for print

  Likewise, sed could show me everything else BUT those particular
  lines, without physically changing the file on the disk:

     sed 12,18d myfile      # the 'd' stands for delete

  Sed could also double-space my single-spaced file when it came time
  to print it:

     sed G myfile >newfile

  If you have many editing commands (for deleting, adding,
  substituting, etc.) which might take up several lines, those
  commands can be put into a separate file and all of the commands in
  the file applied to file being edited:

     sed -f script.sed myfile  # 'script.sed' is the file of commands
                               # 'myfile' is the file being changed

  It is not our intention to convert this FAQ file into a full-blown
  sed tutorial (for good tutorials, see section 2.3). Rather, we hope
  this gives the complete novice a few ideas of how sed can be used.

2.2. What versions of sed are there, and where can I get them?

2.2.1. Free versions

  Note: "Free" does not mean "public domain". "Free" doesn't mean you
  can sell it, put your name on it, or get the source code. "Free"
  just means you don't have to pay money for it.

2.2.1.1. Unix platforms

  GNU sed v3.02.80                                                           |
  Now a,i,c commands can accept a string after them. Range syntax now        |
  supports "/RE/,+n" (next n lines) or "/RE/,~n" (till the next line         |
  which is a multiple of n). NULs permitted in regexes; \n, \t, \a,          |
  \f, \xHH hex codes supported on LHS and RHS; more changes. An alpha        |
  test release which (if found bug-free) will become GNU sed version         |
  3.03. Supersedes GNU sed-3.02a.                                            |
     ftp://alpha.gnu.org/pub/gnu/sed/sed-3.02.80.tar.gz                      |

  GNU sed v3.02a                                                             |
  Interim version with most of what is now gsed-3.02.80 (above),             |
  which supersedes it.                                                       |

  GNU sed v3.02
  This is the latest official version of GNU sed
     ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/sed/sed-3.02.tar.gz

  GNU sed v2.05                                                              |
  This version is superseded by v3.02 and v3.02.80, above.                   |

  GNU mirror sites. A list of mirror sites is at:
     http://www.ensta.fr/internet/unix/GNU-archives.html

  Precompiled versions:

  GNU sed v3.02-1
  source code and binaries for Debian Linux
     http://www.debian.org/Packages/unstable/base/sed.html

  GNU sed v2.05-12
  source code and binaries for Debian Linux (Note: the code for gsed
  3.02 is much better despite the name "unstable" in the pathname.)
     http://www.debian.org/Packages/stable/base/sed.html

  The 4.4BSD version of sed is available from any 4.4BSD-Lite2 mirror
  site:
     ftp://ftp.ntua.gr/pub/bsd/4.4BSD/usr/src/usr.bin/sed/

  For some time, the GNU project <http://www.gnu.org> used Eric S.
  Raymond's version of sed (ESR sed v1.1), but eventually dropped it
  because it had too many built-in limits. In 1991 Howard Helman
  modified the GNU/ESR sed and produced a flexible version of sed
  v1.5 available at several sites (Helman's version permitted things
  like \<...\> to delimit word boundaries, \xHH to enter hex code and
  \n to indicate newlines in the replace string). This version did
  not catch on with the GNU project and their version of sed has
  moved in a similar but different direction.

  sed v1.3, by Eric Steven Raymond (released 4 June 1998)
     http://earthspace.net/~esr/sed-1.3.tar.gz

  Eric Raymond <[email protected]> wrote one of the earliest
  versions of sed. On his website <http://www.tuxedo.org/~esr/> which
  also distributes many freeware utilities he has written or worked
  on, he describes sed v1.1 this way:

  "This is the fast, small sed originally distributed in the GNU
  toolkit and still distributed with Minix. The GNU people ditched it
  when they built their own sed around an enhanced regex package --
  but it's still better for some uses (in particular, faster and less
  memory-intensive)." (Version 1.3 fixes an unidentified bug and adds
  the L command to hexdump the current pattern space.)

2.2.1.2. OS/2

  GNU sed v3.0
  Note: version 3.0 was withdrawn due to numerous bugs, and as soon
  as someone gives us a URL for version 3.02 or higher compiled for
  OS/2, we will remove this entry. User beware!
     ftp://hobbes.nmsu.edu/pub/os2/apps/editors/gnused.zip

  GNU sed v2.05 (requires 'emxrt.zip', below)                                |
     http://oak.oakland.edu/pub/os2/editors/gnused.zip                       |
     http://oak.oakland.edu/pub/os2/emx09c/emxrt.zip                         |

  GNU sed v1.06                                                              |
     http://oak.oakland.edu/pub/os2/editors/sed106.zip                       |

2.2.1.3. Microsoft Windows (3.1, NT, Win95)                                   |

  GNU sed v3.02.80                                                           |
  32-bit binaries and docs, using DJGPP compiler. For details on new         |
  features, see Unix section, above.                                         |
     http://www.cornerstonemag.com/sed/sed3028a.zip    # DOS binaries        |
     ftp://alpha.gnu.org/pub/gnu/sedsed-3.02.80.tar.gz # source              |

  GNU sed v3.02
  32-bit binaries and source, using DJGPP compiler. Requires 80386 SX
  or better. Also requires 3 CWS*.EXE extenders if run under MS-DOS.
  See section 5.5 ("What is CSDPMI*B.ZIP and why do I need it?"),
  below. This version will run under Windows or under MS-DOS.

  The binary archive (sed302b.zip) contains 2 executables, sed.exe
  and gsed.exe.  sed.exe was compiled with the DJGPP regex library,
  which is POSIX.2-compliant and usually runs faster; gsed.exe was
  compiled with the GNU regex library, which though it runs slower
  and is almost POSIX.2-compliant, it has a richer set of regexs and
  will run faster on certain complex regexs which cause the DJGPP
  sed.exe to run extremely slowly.
     ftp://ftp.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2gnu/sed302b.zip
     ftp://ftp.cdrom.com/.27/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2gnu/sed302b.zip
     ftp://ftp.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2gnu/sed302s.zip
     ftp://ftp.cdrom.com/.27/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2gnu/sed302s.zip

  GNU sed v2.05
  32-bit binaries, no docs. Requires 80386 DX (SX will not run) and
  must be run in a DOS window or in a full screen DOS session under
  Microsoft Windows. Will not run in MS-DOS mode (outside Win/Win95).
  We recommend using GNU sed v3.02 (above) instead.
     http://www.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/win95/prog/gsed205b.zip
     ftp://ftp.cdrom.com/.27/simtelnet/win95/prog/gsed205b.zip

  GNU sed v1.03
  modified by Frank Whaley.
     ftp://ftp.itribe.net/pub/virtunix/gnused.zip

  Again, we recommend avoiding versions of GNU sed other than version        |
  3.02 or 3.02.80. However, this version appears to be built on gsed         |
  v1.03 beta as a base and then augmented farther. The authors did           |
  not give this sed its own version number or name. Gsed v1.03 is            |
  offered in the "Virtually UN*X" set of Win32 utilities at                  |
  <http://www.itribe.net/virtunix/>. It supports Win 95/98/NT long
  filenames, and runs in a DOS session or DOS window under Microsoft
  Windows, but does not run in DOS mode. This version of sed supports
  hex, decimal, binary, and octal representation in expressions.

  The Cygwin toolkit:
     http://sourceware.cygnus.com/cygwin/

  Formerly know as "GNU-Win32 tools." According to their home page,
  "The Cygwin tools are Win32 ports of the popular GNU development
  tools for Windows NT, 95 and 98. They function through the use of
  the Cygwin library which provides a UNIX-like API on top of the
  Win32 API." The version of sed used is GNU sed v3.02.

  Minimalist GNU-Win32 (Mingw32):
     ftp://agnes.dida.physik.uni-essen.de/home/janjaap/mingw32/binaries/sed-2.05.zip
     http://agnes.dida.physik.uni-essen.de/~janjaap/mingw32/download.html

  According to their home page, "The Minimalist GNU-Win32 Package (or
  Mingw32) is simply a set of header files and initialization code
  which allows a GNU compiler to link programs with one of the C
  run-time libraries provided by Microsoft. By default it uses
  CRTDLL, which is built into all Win32 operating systems." The
  download page says Mingw32 programs "behave like you would expect
  from a Windows application. They support drive letters, for
  example. A side effect of using CRTDLL is that Mingw32 is
  thread-safe, while Cygwin32 is not." The version of sed used is GNU
  sed v2.05.

  U/WIN:
     http://www.research.att.com/sw/tools/uwin/

  U/WIN is a suite of Unix utilities created for WinNT and Win95
  systems. It is owned by AT&T, created by David Korn (author of the
  Unix korn shell), and is freely distributed provided you sign a
  licensing agreement. U/WIN operates best with the NTFS (WinNT file
  system) but will run in degraded mode with the FAT file system and
  in further degraded mode under Win95. The complete set of utilities
  and development tools takes up about 20 megs of disk space. Sed is
  not available as a separate file for download, but comes with the
  suite.

  sed v1.5 (a/k/a HHsed), by Howard Helman
  Compiled with Mingw32 for 32-bit environments described above. This
  version should support Win95 long filenames.
     http://www.dbnet.ece.ntua.gr/~george/sed/sed15.exe
     http://www.cornerstonemag.com/sed/sed15exe.zip

2.2.1.4. MS-DOS

  sed v1.5 (a/k/a HHsed), by Howard Helman
  uncompiled source code (Turbo C)
     ftp://ftp.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/msdos/txtutl/sed15.zip
     ftp://ftp.cdrom.com/pub/simtelnet/msdos/txtutl/sed15.zip
     ftp://oak.oakland.edu/pub/simtelnet/msdos/txtutl/sed15.zip
     ftp://uiarchive.uiuc.edu/pub/systems/pc/simtelnet/msdos/txtutl/sed15.zip

  DOS executable and documentation
     ftp://ftp.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/msdos/txtutl/sed15x.zip
     ftp://ftp.cdrom.com/pub/simtelnet/msdos/txtutl/sed15x.zip
     ftp://oak.oakland.edu/pub/simtelnet/msdos/txtutl/sed15x.zip
     ftp://uiarchive.uiuc.edu/pub/systems/pc/simtelnet/msdos/txtutl/sed15x.zip

  sedmod v1.0, by Hern Chen
     http://www.ptug.org/sed/SEDMOD10.ZIP
     http://www.cornerstonemag.com/sed/sedmod10.zip
     ftp://garbo.uwasa.fi/pc/unix/sedmod10.zip
     CompuServe DTPFORUM, "PC DTP Tools" library, file SEDMOD.ZIP

  GNU sed v3.02.80                                                           |
  See section 2.2.1.3 ("Microsoft Windows"), above.                          |

  GNU sed v3.02
  See section 2.2.1.3 ("Microsoft Windows"), above.

  GNU sed v2.05
  Does not run under MS-DOS.

  GNU sed v1.18
  32-bit binaries and source, using DJGPP compiler. Requires 80386 SX
  or better. Also requires 3 CWS*.EXE extenders on the path. See
  section 5.5 ("What is CSDPMI*B.ZIP and why do I need it?"), below.
  We recommend using GNU sed v3.02 (above) instead.
     http://www.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2gnu/sed118b.zip
     ftp://ftp.cdrom.com/pub/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2gnu/sed118b.zip
     http://www.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2gnu/sed118s.zip
     ftp://ftp.cdrom.com/pub/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2gnu/sed118s.zip

  GNU sed v1.06
  16-bit binaries and source. Should run under any MS-DOS system.
     http://www.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/gnu/gnuish/sed106.zip
     ftp://ftp.cdrom.com/pub/simtelnet/gnu/gnuish/sed106.zip

2.2.1.5. CP/M

  ssed v2.2, by Chuck A. Forsberg
     http://oak.oakland.edu/pub/cpm/txtutl/ssed22.lbr

  Written for CP/M, ssed (for "small/stupid stream editor) supports
  only the a(ppend), c(hange), d(elete) and i(nsert) options, and
  apparently doesn't support regular expressions. It does have a -u
  option to "unsqueeze" compressed files and was used mainly in
  conjunction with dif.com for source code maintenance.

  change, by Michael M. Rubenstein
     http://oak.oakland.edu/pub/cpm/txtutl/ttools.lbr

  Rubenstein probably felt that "sed" was an obscure name, so he
  renamed it CHANGE.COM (the TTOOLS.LBR archive member CHANGE.CZM is
  a "crunched" file). Unlike ssed, change supports full RE's except
  for grouping and backreferences, and its only function is for
  global substitution.

2.2.2. Shareware and Commercial versions

2.2.2.1. Unix platforms

     ** Information needed **

2.2.2.2. OS/2

     None known

2.2.2.3. Windows NT, Windows 95

  Interix:
     http://www.interix.com

  Interix (formerly known as OpenNT) is advertised as "a complete
  UNIX system environment running natively on Microsoft Windows NT",
  and is licensed and supported by Softway Systems. It offers over
  200 Unix utilities, and supports Unix shells, sockets, networking,
  and more. A single-user edition runs about $200. A free demo or
  evaluation copy will run for 31 days and then quit; to continue
  using it, you must purchase the commercial version.

  UnixDos:
     http://www.unixdos.com

  UnixDos is a suite of 82 Unix utilities ported over to the Windows
  environments. There are 16-bit versions for Win 3.1 and 32-bit
  versions for WinNT/Win95. It is distributed as uncrippled shareware
  for the first 30 days. After the test period, the utilities will
  not run and you must pay the registration fee of $50.

  Their version of sed supports "\n" in the RHS of expressions, and
  increases the length of input lines to 10,000 characters. By
  special arrangement with the owners, persons who want a licensed
  version of sed *only* (without the other utilities) may pay a
  license fee of $10.

2.2.2.4. MS-DOS

  MKS (Mortice Kern Systems) Toolkit
     http://www.mks.com

  Sed comes bundled with the MKS Toolkit, which is distributed only
  as commercial software; it is not available separately.

  Thompson Automation Software
     http://www.teleport.com/~thompson/

  The Thompson Toolkit contains over 100 familiar Unix utilities,
  including a version of the Unix Korn shell. It runs under MS-DOS,
  OS/2, Win 3.0/3.1, Win95, and WinNT. Sed is one of the utilities,
  though Thompson is better known for its version of awk for DOS,
  TAWK. The toolkit runs about $150; sed is not available separately.

2.3. Where can I learn to use sed?

2.3.1. Books

  _Sed & Awk, 2d edition_, by Dale Dougherty & Arnold Robbins
  (Sebastopol, Calif: O'Reilly and Associates, 1997)
  ISBN 1-56592-225-5
     http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/sed2/noframes.html

  About 40 percent of this book is devoted to sed, and maybe 50
  percent is devoted to awk. The other 10 percent is given to regular
  expressions and concepts which are common to both tools. If you
  prefer hard copy, this is definitely the best single place to learn
  to use sed, including its advanced features.

  The first edition is also very useful. Several typos crept into the
  first printing of the first edition (though if you follow the
  tutorials closely, you'll recognize them right away). A list of
  errors from the first printing of _sed & awk_ is available at
  <http://www.cs.colostate.edu/~dzubera/sedawk.txt> (most of these
  were corrected in subsequent printings). The second edition tells
  how POSIX standards have affected these tools and covers the
  popular GNU versions of sed and awk. Price is about (US) $30.00

  -----

  _Mastering Regular Expressions_, by Jeffrey E. F. Friedl
  (Sebastopol, Calif: O'Reilly and Associates, 1997)
  ISBN 1-56592-257-3
     http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/regex/
     http://enterprise.ic.gc.ca/~jfriedl/regex/index.html

  Knowing how to use "regular expressions" is essential to effective
  use of most Unix tools. This book focuses on how regular
  expressions can be best implemented in utilities such as perl, vi,
  emacs, and awk, but also touches on sed as well. Friedl's home page
  (above) gives links to other sites which help students learn to
  master regular expressions. His site also gives a Perl script for
  determining a syntactically valid e-mail address, using regexes:
     http://enterprise.ic.gc.ca/~jfriedl/regex/email-opt.pl

  -----

  _Awk und Sed_, by Helmut Herold. (Bonn: Addison-Wesley, 1994)
  ISBN 3-89319-685-4
  VVA-Nr. 563-00685-8

  The text of this book is in German. Now out of print.

  -----

  _Linux-Unix-Profitools: awk, sed, lex, yacc und make_, by Helumt
  Herold. (Bonn: Addison-Wesley, 1998)
  ISBN 3-8273-1448-8

     http://www.addison-wesley.de:80/katalog/item.ppml?id=00262

  The text of this book is in German. (Comments from German-speaking
  reviewers appreciated!)

2.3.2. Mailing list

  The informal "seders" mailing list has changed to a Majordomo              |
  mailing list called "sed-users". Regular and digest versions are           |
  available. Average mail volume is 12-25 messages per week. For more        |
  information, address mail to "[email protected]" with any          |
  subject line and the following in the message body:                        |

     info sed-users [email protected]                                       |

  To subscribe, mail to "[email protected]" with any subject         |
  line and one of the following in the message body:                         |

     subscribe sed-users [email protected]                                  |
     subscribe sed-users-digest [email protected]                           |

2.3.3. Tutorials, electronic text

  The original users manual for sed, by Lee E. McMahon, from the
  7th edition UNIX Manual (1978), with the classic "Kubla Khan"
  example and tutorial, in formatted text format:
     http://www.urc.bl.ac.yu/manuals/progunix/sed.txt
     http://www.softlab.ntua.gr/unix/docs/sed.txt

  The source code to the preceding manual. Use "troff -ms sed" to
  print this file properly:
     http://plan9.bell-labs.com/7thEdMan/vol2/sed
     http://cm.bell-labs.com/7thEdMan/vol2/sed

  "Do It With Sed", by Carlos Duarte
     http://www.dbnet.ece.ntua.gr/~george/sed/sedtut_1.html

  U-SEDIT2.ZIP, by Mike Arst (16 June 1990)
     http://wuarchive.wustl.edu/systems/ibmpc/garbo.uwasa.fi/editor/u-sedit2.zip
     ftp://ftp.cs.umu.se/pub/pc/u-sedit2.zip
     ftp://ftp.uni-stuttgart.de/pub/systems/msdos/util/unixlike/u-sedit2.zip
     ftp://sunsite.icm.edu.pl/vol/d2/garbo/pc/editor/u-sedit2.zip
     ftp://ftp.sogang.ac.kr/.1/msdos_garbo/editor/u-sedit2.zip

  U-SEDIT3.ZIP, by Mike Arst (24 Jan. 1992)
     http://www.cornerstonemag.com/sed/u-sedit3.zip
     CompuServe DTPFORUM, "PC DTP Utilities" library, file SEDDOC.ZIP

  sed-tutorial, by Felix von Leitner
     http://www.math.fu-berlin.de/~leitner/sed/tutorial.html

  "Manipulating text with sed," chapter 14 of the SCO OpenServer
  "Operating System Users Guide"
     http://dontask.caltech.edu:457/cgi-bin/printchapter/OSUserG/BOOKCHAPTER-14.html
     http://www.multisoft.it:457/OSUserG/_Manipulating_text_with_sed.html

  "Combining the Bourne-shell, sed and awk in the UNIX environment
  for language analysis," by Lothar M. Schmitt and Kiel T.
  Christianson. This basic tutorial on the Bourne shell, sed and awk
  downloads as a 71-page PostScript file (compressed to 290K with
  gzip). You may need to navigate down from the root to get the file.
     ftp://ftp.u-aizu.ac.jp/u-aizu/doc/Tech-Report/1997/97-2-007.tar.gz
     available upon request from Lothar Schmitt <[email protected]>

2.3.4. General web and ftp sites

  http://www.cis.nctu.edu.tw/~gis84806/sed/     # Yao-Jen Chang
  http://www.math.fu-berlin.de/~guckes/sed/     # Sven Guckes
  http://www.math.fu-berlin.de/~leitner/sed/    # Felix von Leitner
  http://www.dbnet.ece.ntua.gr/~george/sed/     # Yiorgos Adamopoulos
  http://www.cornerstonemag.com/sed/            # Eric Pement

  http://spacsun.rice.edu/FAQ/sed.html

  ftp://algos.inesc.pt/pub/users/cdua/scripts/sed (Carlos Duarte)
  ftp://algos.inesc.pt/pub/users/cdua/scripts/sh  (sed & shell script)

  "Handy One-Liners For Sed", compiled by Eric Pement. A large list
  of 1-line sed commands which can be executed from the command line.
  http://www.cornerstonemag.com/sed/sed1line.txt
  http://www.dbnet.ece.ntua.gr/~george/sed/1liners.html

  The Single UNIX Specification, Version 2 (technical man page)
  http://www.rdg.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/7908799/xcu/sed.html

  Getting started with sed
  http://ftp.uni-klu.ac.at/sed/sed.html

  Comments in sed
  http://www.bluesky.com.au:457/OSUserG/_Comments_in_sed.html

  "Using sed"
  http://www.multisoft.it:457/OSUserG/_Using_sed_main.html

  masm to gas converter
  http://www.delorie.com/djgpp/faq/converting/asm2s-sed.html

  AltaVista results: "sed script" (744+)                                     |
  http://www.altavista.com/cgi-bin/query?pg=q&kl=XX&stype=stext&q=%22sed+script%22                                                              |              |

  Google results: "sed script" (668+)                                        |
  http://www.google.com/search?q=%22sed+script%22                            |

  HotBot results: "sed script" (190+)                                        |
  http://www.hotbot.com/?MT=%22sed+script%22&SM=MC&DV=0&LG=any&DC=10&DE=2    |

  mail2html.zip
  http://hiwaay.net/~crispen/src/mail2html.zip

  customize VIM to aid writing sed scripts
  http://www.fys.uio.no/~hakonrk/vim/syntax/sed.vim

  sample uses of sed in batch files and scripts (Benny Pederson)             |
  http://users.cybercity.dk/~bse26236/batutil/batutil.html                   |

------------------------------

3. TECHNICAL

3.1. More detailed explanation of basic sed

  Sed takes a script of editing commands and applies each command, in
  order, to each line of input. After all the commands have been
  applied to the first line of input, that line is output. A second
  input line is taken for processing, and the cycle repeats. Sed
  scripts can address a single line by line number or by matching a
  /RE pattern/ on the line. An exclamation mark '!' after a regex
  ('/RE/!') or line number will select all lines that do NOT match
  that address. Sed can also address a range of lines in the same
  manner, using a comma to separate the 2 addresses.

     $d               # delete the last line of the file
     /[0-9]\{3\}/p    # print lines with 3 consecutive digits
     5!s/ham/cheese/  # except on line 5, replace 'ham' with 'cheese'
     /awk/!s/aaa/bb/  # unless 'awk' is found, replace 'aaa' with 'bb'
     17,/foo/d        # delete all lines from line 17 up to 'foo'

  Following an address or address range, sed accepts curly braces
  '{...}' so several commands may be applied to that line or to the
  lines matched by the address range. On the command line, semicolons
  ';' separate each instruction and must precede the closing brace.

     sed '/Owner:/{s/yours/mine/g;s/your/my/g;s/you/me/g;}' file

  Range addresses operate differently depending on which version of
  sed is used (see section 6.8.5, below). For further information on
  using sed, consult the references in section 2.3, above. The online
  manual ("man pages") on Unix/Linux systems may be helpful (try "man
  sed"), but man pages are notoriously obscure for first-time users.

3.2. Common one-line sed scripts

  A separate document of over 70 handy "one-line" sed commands is
  available at <http://www.cornerstonemag.com/sed/sed1line.txt>. Here
  are fourteen of the most common sed commands for one-line use.
  MS-DOS users should replace single quotes ('...') with double
  quotes ("...") in these examples. A specific filename ("file")
  usually follows the script, though the input may also come via
  piping ("sort somefile | sed 'somescript'").

  # 1. Double space a file
  sed G file

  # 2. Triple space a file
  sed 'G;G' file

  # 3. Under UNIX: convert DOS newlines (CR/LF) to Unix format
  sed 's/.$//' file    # assumes that all lines end with CR/LF
  sed 's/^M$// file    # in bash/tcsh, press Ctrl-V then Ctrl-M

  # 4. Under DOS: convert Unix newlines (LF) to DOS format
  sed 's/$//' file                     # method 1
  sed -n p file                        # method 2

  # 5. Delete leading whitespace (spaces/tabs) from front of each line
  # (this aligns all text flush left). '^t' represents a true tab
  # character. Under bash or tcsh, press Ctrl-V then Ctrl-I.
  sed 's/^[ ^t]*//' file

  # 6. Delete trailing whitespace (spaces/tabs) from end of each line
  sed 's/[ ^t]*$//' file               # see note on '^t', above

  # 7. Delete BOTH leading and trailing whitespace from each line
  sed 's/^[ ^t]*//;s/[ ^]*$//' file    # see note on '^t', above

  # 8. Substitute "foo" with "bar" on each line
  sed 's/foo/bar/' file        # replaces only 1st instance in a line
  sed 's/foo/bar/4' file       # replaces only 4th instance in a line
  sed 's/foo/bar/g' file       # replaces ALL instances within a line

  # 9. Substitute "foo" with "bar" ONLY for lines which contain "baz"
  sed '/baz/s/foo/bar/g' file

  # 10. Delete all CONSECUTIVE blank lines from file except the first.
  # This method also deletes all blank lines from top and end of file.
  # (emulates "cat -s")
  sed '/./,/^$/!d' file       # this allows 0 blanks at top, 1 at EOF
  sed '/^$/N;/\n$/D' file     # this allows 1 blank at top, 0 at EOF

  # 11. Delete all leading blank lines at top of file (only).
  sed '/./,$!d' file

  # 12. Delete all trailing blank lines at end of file (only).
  sed -e :a -e '/^\n*$/N;/\n$/ba' file

  # 13. If a line ends with a backslash, join the next line to it.
  sed -e :a -e '/\\$/N; s/\\\n//; ta' file

  # 14. If a line begins with an equal sign, append it to the
  # previous line (and replace the "=" with a single space).
  sed -e :a -e '$!N;s/\n=/ /;ta' -e 'P;D' file

3.3. Addressing and address ranges

  Sed commands may have an optional "address" or "address range"
  prefix. If there is no address or address range given, then the
  command is applied to all the lines of the input file or text
  stream. Three commands cannot take an address prefix:

  - labels, used to branch or jump within the script
  - the close brace, '}', which ends the '{' "command"
  - the '#' comment character, also technically a "command"

  An address can be a line number (such as 1, 5, 37, etc.), a regular
  expression (written in the form /RE/ or \xREx where 'x' is any
  character other than '\' and RE is the regular expression), or the
  dollar sign ($), representing the last line of the file. An
  exclamation mark (!) after an address or address range will apply
  the command to every line EXCEPT the ones named by the address. A
  null regex ("//") will be replaced by the last regex which was
  used. Also, some seds do not support \xREx as regex delimiters.

     5d               # delete line 5 only
     5!d              # delete every line except line 5
     /RE/s/LHS/RHS/g  # substitute only if RE occurs on the line
     /^$/b label      # if the line is blank, branch to ':label'
     /./!b label      # ... another way to write the same command
     \%.%!b label     # ... yet another way to write this command
     $!N              # on all lines but the last, get the Next line

  Note that an embedded newline can be represented in an address by
  the symbol \n, but this syntax is needed only if the script puts 2
  or more lines into the pattern space via the N, G, or other
  commands. The \n symbol does *not* match the newline at an
  end-of-line because when sed reads each line into the pattern space
  for processing, it strips off the trailing newline, processes the
  line, and adds a newline back when printing the line to standard
  output. To match the end-of-line, use the '$' metacharacter, as
  follows:

     /tape$/       # matches the word 'tape' at the end of a line
     /tape$deck/   # matches the word 'tape$deck' with a literal '$'
     /tape\ndeck/  # matches 'tape' and 'deck' with a newline between

  The following sed commands usually accept *only* a single address.
  All other commands (except labels, '}', and '#') accept both single
  addresses and address ranges.

     =       print to stdout the line number of the current line
     a       after printing the current line, append "text" to stdout
     i       before printing the current line, insert "text" to stdout
     q       quit after the current line is matched
     r file  prints contents of "file" to stdout after line is matched

  Note that we said "usually." If you need to apply the '=', 'a',
  'i', or 'r' commands to each and every line within an address
  range, this behavior can be coerced by the use of braces. Thus,
  "1,9=" is an invalid command, but "1,9{=;}" will print each line
  number followed by its line for the first 9 lines (and then print
  the rest of the rest of the file normally).

  Address ranges occur in the form

     <address1>,<address2>    or    <address1>,<address2>!

  where the address can be a line number or a standard /regex/.
  <address2> can also be a dollar sign, indicating the end of file.
  Under HHsed and gsed302a, <address2> may also be a notation of the
  form +num, indicating the next _num_ lines after <address1> is
  matched.

  Address ranges are:

  (1) Inclusive. The range "/From here/,/eternity/" matches all the
  lines containing "From here" up to and including the line
  containing "eternity". It will not stop on the line just prior to
  "eternity". (If you don't like this, see section 4.15.)

  (2) Plenary. They always match full lines, not just parts of lines.
  In other words, a command to change or delete an address range will
  change or delete whole lines; it won't stop in the middle of a
  line.

  (3) Multilinear. Address ranges normally match 2 lines or more. The
  second address will never match the same line the first address
  did; therefore a valid address range always spans at least two
  lines, with these exceptions which match only one line:

  - if the first address matches the last line of the file
  - if using the syntax "/RE/,3" and /RE/ occurs only once in the
    file at line 3 or below
  - if using HHsed v1.5. See section 6.8.5.

  (4) Minimalist. In address ranges with /regex/ as <address2>, the
  range "/foo/,/bar/" will stop at the first "bar" it finds, provided
  that "bar" occurs on a line below "foo". If the word "bar" occurs
  on several lines below the word "foo", the range will match all the
  lines from the first "foo" up to the first "bar". It will not
  continue hopping ahead to find more "bar"s. In other words, address
  ranges are not "greedy," like regular expressions.

  (5) Repeating. An address range will try to match more than one
  block of lines in a file. However, the blocks cannot nest. In
  addition, a second match will not "take" the last line of the
  previous block.  For example, given the following text,

     start
     stop  start
     stop

  the sed command '/start/,/stop/d' will only delete the first two
  lines. It will not delete all 3 lines.

  (6) Relentless. If the address range finds a "start" match but
  doesn't find a "stop", it will match every line from "start" to the
  end of the file. Thus, beware of the following behaviors:

     /RE1/,/RE2/  # if /RE2/ is not found, matches from /RE1/ to the
                  # end-of-file

     20,/RE/      # if /RE/ is not found, matches from line 20 to the
                  # end-of-file

     /RE/,30      # if /RE/ occurs any time after line 30, each
                  # occurrence will be matched in HHsed, sedmod, and
                  # gsed302. GNU sed v2.05 and 1.18 will match from
                  # the 2nd occurrence of /RE/ to the end-of-file.

  If these behaviors seem strange, remember that they occur because
  sed does not look "ahead" in the file. Doing so would stop sed from
  being a stream editor and have adverse effects on its efficiency.
  If these behaviors are undesirable, they can be circumvented or
  corrected by the use of nested testing within braces. The following
  scripts work under GNU sed 3.02:

     # Execute your_commands on range "/RE1/,/RE2/", but if /RE2/ is
     # not found, do nothing.
     /RE1/{:a;N;/RE2/!ba;your_commands;}

     # Execute your_commands on range "20,/RE/", but if /RE/ is not
     # found, do nothing.
     20{:a;N;/RE/!ba;your_commands;}

  As a side note, once we've used N to "slurp" lines together to test
  for the ending expression, the pattern space will have gathered
  many lines (possibly thousands) together and concatenated them as a
  single expression, with the \n sequence marking line breaks. The
  REs *within* the pattern space may have to be modified (e.g., you
  must write '/\nStart/' instead of '/^Start/' and '/[^\n]*/' instead
  of '/.*/') and other standard sed commands will be unavailable or
  difficult to use.

     # Execute your_commands on range "/RE/,30", but if /RE/ occurs
     # on line 31 or later, do not match it.
     1,30{/RE/,$ your_commands;}

  For related suggestions on using address ranges, see sections 4.2,
  4.15, and 4.19 of this FAQ. Note that HHsed contains a bug or
  nonstandard feature in how it implements address ranges; also, GNU
  sed 3.02a supports a zero (0) in addressing. For more details, see
  section 6.8.5 ("Range addressing with GNU sed and HHsed").

3.4. [reserved]

3.5. [reserved]

3.6. [reserved]

3.7. GNU/POSIX extensions to regular expressions

  GNU sed supports "character classes" in addition to regular
  character sets, such as [0-9A-F]. Like regular character sets,
  character classes represent any single character within a set.

  "Character classes are a new feature introduced in the POSIX
  standard. A character class is a special notation for describing
  lists of characters that have a specific attribute, but where the
  actual characters themselves can vary from country to country
  and/or from character set to character set. For example, the notion
  of what is an alphabetic character differs in the USA and in
  France." [quoted from the docs for GNU awk v3.0.3]

  Though character classes don't generally conserve space on the
  line, they help make scripts portable for international use. The
  equivalent character sets *for U.S. users* follow:

     [[:alnum:]]  - [A-Za-z0-9]     Alphanumeric characters
     [[:alpha:]]  - [A-Za-z]        Alphabetic characters
     [[:blank:]]  - [ \x09]         Space or tab characters only
     [[:cntrl:]]  - [\x00-\x19\x7F] Control characters
     [[:digit:]]  - [0-9]           Numeric characters
     [[:graph:]]  - [!-~]           Printable and visible characters
     [[:lower:]]  - [a-z]           Lower-case alphabetic characters
     [[:print:]]  - [ -~]           Printable (non-Control) characters
     [[:punct:]]  - [!-/:-@[-`{-~]  Punctuation characters
     [[:space:]]  - [ \t\v\f]       All whitespace chars
     [[:upper:]]  - [A-Z]           Upper-case alphabetic characters
     [[:xdigit:]] - [0-9a-fA-F]     Hexadecimal digit characters

  Note that [[:graph:]] does not match the space " ", but [[:print:]]
  does. Some character classes may (or may not) match characters in
  the high ASCII range (ASCII 128-255 or 0x80-0xFF), depending on
  which C library was used to compile sed. For non-English languages,
  [[:alpha:]] and other classes may also match high ASCII characters.

------------------------------

4. EXAMPLES

4.1. How do I perform a case-insensitive search?

  Use GNU sed v3.02 (or higher) with the I flag ("/regex/I" or               |
  "s/LHS/RHS/I"). Or use sedmod with the -i switch on the command            |
  line. With other versions of sed this is not easy to do, so some           |
  people use GNU awk (gawk), mawk, or perl, since these programs have        |
  options for case-insensitive searches. In gawk/mawk, use "BEGIN            |
  {IGNORECASE=1}" and in perl, "/regex/i". For sed, here are three           |
  solutions:                                                                 |

  Solution 1: convert everything to upper case and search normally

     # sed script, solution 1
     h;          # copy the original line to the hold space
                 # convert the pattern space to solid caps
     y/abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz/ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ/
                 # now we can search for the word "CARLOS"
     /CARLOS/ {
          # add or insert lines. Note: "s/.../.../" will not work
          # here because we are searching a modified pattern
          # space and are not printing the pattern space.
     }
     x;          # get back the original pattern space
                 # the original pattern space will be printed

  Solution 2: search for both cases

  Often, proper names will either start with all lower-case ("unix"),
  with an initial capital letter ("Unix") or occur in solid caps
  ("UNIX"). There may be no need to search for every possibility.

     /UNIX/b match
     /[Uu]nix/b match

  Solution 3: search for all possible cases

     # If all else fails, search for any possible combination
     /[Ca][Aa][Rr][Ll][Oo][Ss]/...

  Bear in mind that as the pattern length increases, this solution
  becomes an order of magnitude slower than the one of Solution 1, at
  least with some implementations of sed.

4.2. How do I make changes in only part of a file?

  Select parts of a file for changing by naming a range of lines
  either by number (e.g., lines 1-20), by RE (between the words "foo"
  and "bar"), or by some combination of the two. For multiple
  changes, put the substitution command between braces {...}.

     # replace only between lines 1 and 20
     1,20 s/Johnson/White/g

     # replace everywhere EXCEPT between lines 1 and 20
     1,20 !s/Johnson/White/g

     # replace only between words "foo" and "bar"
     /foo/,/bar/ { s/Johnson/White/g; s/Smith/Wesson/g; }

     # replace only from the words "ENDNOTES:" to the end of file
     /ENDNOTES:/,$ { s/Schaff/Herzog/g; s/Kraft/Ebbing/g; }

  For technical details on using address ranges, see section 3.3
  ("Addressing and Address ranges").

4.3. How do I change only the first occurrence of a pattern?

  To replace the regex "LHS" with "RHS", do this:

     gsed '0,/LHS/s//RHS/'                       # GNU sed 3.02a
     sed -e '1s/LHS/RHS/;t' -e '1,/LHS/s//RHS/'  # other seds

  If you know the pattern *won't* occur on the first line, omit the
  first -e and the statement following it.

4.4. How do I make substitutions in every file in a directory, or in a
    complete directory tree?

4.4.1. - Perl solution

  (Yes, we know this is a FAQ file for sed, not perl, but the
  solution is so simple that it has to be noted. Also, perl and
  sed share a very similar syntax here.)

     perl -pi.bak -e 's|foo|bar|g' filelist     # or                         |
     perl -pi.bak -e 's|foo|bar|g' `find /pathname -name "filespec"`         |

  For each file in the filelist, perl renames the source file to
  "filename.bak"; the modified file gets the original filename.
  Change '-pi.bak' to '-pi' if you don't need backup copies. (Note
  the use of s||| instead of s/// here, and in the scripts below.
  The vertical bars in the 's' command lets you replace '/some/path'
  with '/another/path', accommodating slashes in the LHS and RHS.)

4.4.2. - Unix solution

  For all files in a single directory, assuming they end with *.txt
  and you have no files named "[anything].txt.bak" already, use a
  shell script:

     #! /bin/sh
     # Source files are saved as "filename.txt.bak" in case of error
     # The '&&' after cp is an additional safety feature
     for file in *.txt
     do
        cp $file $file.bak &&
        sed 's|foo|bar|g' $file.bak >$file
     done

  To do an entire directory tree, use the Unix utility find, like so
  (thanks to Jim Dennis <[email protected]> for this script):

     #! /bin/sh
     # filename: replaceall
     find . -type f -name '*.txt' -print | while read i
     do
        sed 's|foo|bar|g' $i > $i.tmp && mv $i.tmp $i
     done

  This previous shell script recurses through the directory tree,
  finding only files in the directory (not symbolic links, which will
  be encountered by the shell command "for file in *.txt", above). To
  preserve file permissions and make backup copies, use the 2-line cp
  routine of the earlier script instead of "sed ... && mv ...". By
  replacing the sed command 's|foo|bar|g' with something like

     sed "s|$1|$2|g" ${i}.bak > $i

  using double quotes instead of single quotes, the user can also
  employ positional parameters on the shell script command tail, thus
  reusing the script from time to time. For example,

     replaceall East West

  would modify all your *.txt files in the current directory.

4.4.3. - DOS solution:

  MS-DOS users should use two batch files like this:

     @echo off
     :: MS-DOS filename: REPLACE.BAT
     ::
     :: Create a destination directory to put the new files.
     :: Note: The next command will fail under Novel Netware
     :: below version 4.10 unless "SHOW DOTS=ON" is active.
     if not exist .\NEWFILES\NUL mkdir NEWFILES
     for %%f in (*.txt) do CALL REPL_2.BAT %%f
     echo Done!!
     :: =======End of the first batch file====

     @echo off
     :: MS-DOS filename: REPL_2.BAT
     ::
     sed "s/foo/bar/g" %1 > NEWFILES\%1
     :: =======End of the second batch file===

  When finished, the current directory contains all the original
  files, and the newly-created NEWFILES subdirectory contains the
  modified *.TXT files. Do not attempt a command like

     for %%f in (*.txt) do sed "s/foo/bar/g" %%f >NEWFILES\%%f

  under any version of MS-DOS because the output filename will be
  created as a literal '%f' in the NEWFILES directory before the
  %%f is expanded to become each filename in (*.txt). This occurs
  because MS-DOS creates output filenames via redirection commands
  before it expands "for..in..do" variables.

  To recurse through an entire directory tree in MS-DOS requires a
  batch file more complex than we have room to describe. Examine the
  file SWEEP.BAT in Timo Salmi's great archive of batch tricks,
  TSBAT58.ZIP, located at <ftp://garbo.uwasa.fi/pc/ts/tsbat58.zip>,
  or get an external program designed for directory recursion. Here
  are some recommended programs for directory recursion:
     http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Lakes/1888/forall.zip
     http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Lakes/2414/fortn711.zip
     http://garbo.uwasa.fi/pc/filefind/target15.zip

4.5. How do I parse a comma-delimited data file?

  Comma-delimited data files can come in several forms, requiring
  increasing levels of complexity in parsing and handling:

  (a) No quotes, no internal commas

     1001,John Smith,PO Box 123,Chicago,IL,60699
     1002,Mary Jones,320 Main,Denver,CO,84100,

  (b) Like (a), with quotes around each field

     "1003","John Smith","PO Box 123","Chicago","IL","60699"
     "1004","Mary Jones","320 Main","Denver","CO","84100"

  (c) Like (b), with embedded commas

     "1005","Tom Hall, Jr.","61 Ash Ct.","Niles","OH","44446"
     "1006","Bob Davis","429 Pine, Apt. 5","Boston","MA","02128"

  (d) Like (c), with embedded commas and quotes

     "1007","Sue "Red" Smith","19 Main","Troy","MI","48055"
     "1008","Joe "Hey, guy!" Hall","POB 44","Reno","NV","89504"

  In each example above, we have 7 fields and 6 commas which function
  as field separators. Case (c) is a very typical form of these data
  files, with double quotes used to enclose each field and to protect
  internal commas (such as "Tom Hall, Jr.") from interpretation as
  field separators. However, many times the data may include both
  embedded quotation marks as well as embedded commas, as seen by
  case (d), above.

  Before handling a comma-delimited data file, make sure that you
  fully understand its format and check the integrity of the data.
  Does each line contain the same number of fields? Should certain
  fields be composed only of numbers or of two-letter state
  abbreviations in all caps? Sed (or awk or perl) should be used to
  validate the integrity of the data file before you attempt to alter
  it or extract particular fields from the file.

  After ensuring that each line has a valid number of fields, use sed
  to locate and modify individual fields, using the \(...\) grouping
  command where needed.

  In case (a):

     sed 's/^[^,]*,[^,]*,[^,]*,[^,]*,/.../'
             ^     ^     ^
             |     |     |_ 3rd field
             |     |_______ 2nd field
             |_____________ 1st field

     # Unix script to delete the second field for case (a)
     sed 's/^\([^,]*\),[^,]*,/\1,,/' file

     # Unix script to change field 1 to 9999 for case (a)
     sed 's/^[^,]*,/9999,/' file

  In cases (b) and (c):

     sed 's/^"[^"]*","[^"]*","[^"]*","[^"]*",/.../'
              1st--   2nd--   3rd--   4th--

     # Unix script to delete the second field for case (c)
     sed 's/^\("[^"]*"\),"[^"]*",/\1,"",/' file

     # Unix script to change field 1 to 9999 for case (c)
     sed 's/^"[^"]*",/"9999",/' file

  In case (d):

  One way to parse such files is to replace the 3-character field
  separator "," with an unused character like the tab or vertical
  bar. (Technically, the field separator is only the comma while the
  fields are surrounded by "double quotes", but the net _effect_ is
  that fields are separated by quote-comma-quote, with quote
  characters added to the beginning and end of each record.) Search
  your datafile _first_ to make sure that your character appears
  nowhere in it!

     sed -n '/|/p' file        # search for any instance of '|'
     # if it's not found, we can use the '|' to separate fields

  Then replace the 3-character field separator and parse as before:

     # sed script to delete the second field for case (d)
     s/","/|/g;                  # global change of "," to bar
     s/^\([^|]*\)|[^|]|/\1||/;   # delete 2nd field
     s/|/","/g;                  # global change of bar back to ","

     # sed script to change field 1 to 9999 for case (d)
     # Remember to accommodate leading and trailing quote marks
     s/","/|/g;
     s/^[^|]*|/"9999|/;
     s/|/","/g;

  Note that this technique works only if _each_ and _every_ field is
  surrounded with double quotes, including empty fields. If your
  datafile does not look like case (d), above, or if it omits quote
  marks around empty fields or numeric values, then the complexity of
  the script would probably not be worth the effort to write it in
  sed. For such a case, you should use perl. This question is
  addressed in the Perl FAQ, at question 4.28: "How can I split a
  [character] delimited string except when inside [character]?"

4.6. How do I insert a newline into the RHS of a substitution?

  Six versions of sed permit '\n' to be typed directly into the RHS,         |
  which is then converted to a newline on output: gsed-3.02.80,              |
  gsed-3.02a, gsed103 (with the -x switch), HHsed (a/k/a sed14),             |
  sedmod, and UnixDOS sed. The _easiest_ solution is to use one of           |
  these versions.                                                            |

  For other versions of sed, try one of the following:

  (a) Insert an unused character and pipe the output through tr:

     echo twolines | sed 's/two/& new=/' | tr "=" "\n"   # produces
     two new
     lines

  (b) Use two backslashes (\\) from the shell prompt. Using bash:

     [bash-prompt]$ echo twolines | sed "s/two/& new\\
     >/"
     two new
     lines
     [bash-prompt]$

  (c) Write a multi-line script and use the backslash (\) in the
  middle of the "replace" portion:

     sed -f newline.sed files

     # newline.sed
     s/twolines/two new\
     lines/g

  Some versions of sed may not need the trailing backslash. If so,
  remove it.

  (d) Use the "G" command:

  G appends a newline, plus the contents of the hold space to the end
  of the pattern space. If the hold space is empty, a newline is
  appended anyway. The newline is stored in the pattern space as "\n"
  where it can be addressed by grouping "\(...\)" and moved in the
  RHS. Thus, to change the "twolines" example used earlier, the
  following script will work:

     sed '/twolines/{G;s/\(two\)\(lines\)\(\n\)/\1\3\2/;}'

  (e) Inserting full lines, not breaking lines up:

  If one is not *changing* lines but only inserting complete lines
  before or after a pattern, the procedure is much easier. Use the
  "i" (insert) or "a" (append) command, making the alterations by an
  external script. To insert "This line is new" BEFORE each line
  matching a regex:

     /RE/i This line is new               # HHsed, sedmod, gsed 3.02a
     /RE/{x;s/.*/This line is new/;G;}    # other seds

  To append "This line is new" AFTER each line matching a regex:

     /RE/a This line is new               # HHsed, sedmod, gsed 3.02a
     /RE/{G;s/$/This line is new/;}       # other seds

  To append 2 blank lines after each line matching a regex:

     /RE/{G;G;}                    # assumes the hold space is empty

  To replace each line matching a regex with 5 blank lines:

     /RE/{s/.*//;G;G;G;G;}         # assumes the hold space is empty

  (f) Use the "y///" command if possible:

  On some Unix versions of sed (not GNU sed!), though the s///
  command won't accept '\n' in the RHS, the y/// command does. If
  your Unix sed supports it, a newline after "aaa" can be inserted
  this way (which is not portable to GNU sed or other seds):

     s/aaa/&~/; y/~/\n/;    # assuming no other '~' is on the line!

4.7. How do I represent control-codes or nonprintable characters?

  GNU sed v3.02.80, GNU sed v1.03, and HHsed v1.5 by Howard Helman           |
  all support all support the notation \xNN, where "NN" are two valid        |
  hex numbers, 00-FF.                                                        |

  sed is not intended to process binary or object code, and files            |
  which contain nulls (0x00) will usually generate errors in most            |
  versions of sed (GNU sed 3.02a is an exception; it allows nulls in         |
  the input files and also in regexes).                                      |

  On Unix platforms, the 'echo' command may allow insertion of octal
  or hex values, e.g., `echo "\0nnn"` or `echo -n "\0nnn"`. The echo
  command may also support syntax like '\\b' or '\\t' for backspace
  or tab characters. Check the man pages to see what syntax your
  version of echo supports. Some versions support the following:

     # replace 0x1A (32 octal) with ASCII letters
     sed 's/'`echo "\032"`'/Ctrl-Z/g'

     # note the 3 backslashes in the command below
     sed "s/.`echo \\\b`//g"

4.8. How do I read environment variables with sed?

4.8.1. - on Unix platforms

  In Unix, environment variables are words which begin with a dollar
  sign, such as $TERM, $HOME, $user, or $path.  In sed, the dollar
  sign is used to indicate the last line of the input file, the end
  of a line (in the LHS), or a literal symbol (in the RHS). Sed
  cannot access variables directly, so one must pay attention to
  shell quoting requirements to expand the variables properly.

  To ALLOW the Unix shell to interpret the dollar sign (replacing it
  with an environment variable), put the script in double quotes:

     sed "s/_terminal-type_/$TERM/g" input.file >output.file

  To PREVENT the Unix shell from interpreting the dollar sign
  (letting sed define its meaning), put the script in single quotes:

     sed 's/.$//' DOS.file >Unix.file

  To use BOTH Unix $environment_vars and sed /end-of-line$/ pattern
  matching, use single quotes to bracket the sed part 'like so', then
  follow immediately with double quotes "$HERE" when you want the
  shell to substitute the variable, and resume with single quotes
  again where 'sed should set the meaning'. There must be NO SPACE
  between the closing single quotes and the opening double quotes. To
  demonstrate with the example two sentences above:

     sed 'like so'"$HERE"'sed should set the meaning'  # rough idea
     sed "s/$user"'$/root/' input.file >output.file    # sample use

  In the sample use above, we search for the user's name (which is
  stored as an environment variable) when it occurs at the end of the
  line ($), and we substitute the word "root" in all these occasions.

  In writing shell scripts, we likewise begin with single quote marks
  ('), close them upon encountering the variable, enclose the
  variable name in double quotes ("), and resume with single quotes,
  closing them at the end of the sed script.  Example:

     #! /bin/sh
     # lower to upper, that could be changed
     FROM='abcdefgh'
     TO='ABCDEFGH'
     ... misc commands that pipe data into a longer sed script.
     sed '
     ...
     # do the conversion
     y/'"$FROM"'/'"$TO"'/
     # some more commands go here . . .
     # last line is a single quote mark
     '

  Thus, each variable named $FROM is replaced by $TO, and the single
  quotes are used to glue the multiple lines together in the script.
  (See also section 4.10, "How do I handle shell quoting in sed?")

4.8.2. - on MS-DOS and 4DOS platforms

  Under 4DOS and MS-DOS version 7.0 (Win95) or 7.10 (Win95 OSR2),
  environment variables can be accessed from the command prompt.
  Under MS-DOS 6.22 and below, environment variables can only be
  accessed from within batch files. Environment variables should be
  enclosed between percent signs and are case-insensitive; i.e.,
  %USER% or %user% will display the USER variable. To generate a true
  percent sign, just enter it twice.

  DOS versions of sed require that sed scripts be enclosed by double
  quote marks "..." (not single quotes!) if the script contains
  embedded tabs, spaces, redirection arrows or the vertical bar. In
  fact, if the input for sed comes from piping, a sed script should
  not contain a vertical bar, even if it is protected by double
  quotes (this seems to be bug in the normal MS-DOS syntax). Thus,

     echo blurk | sed "s/^/ |foo /"     # will cause an error
     sed "s/^/ |foo /" blurk.txt        # will work as expected

  Using DOS environment variables which contain DOS path statements
  (such as a TMP variable set to "C:\TEMP") within sed scripts is
  discouraged because sed will interpret the backslash '\' as a
  metacharacter to "quote" the next character, not as a normal
  symbol. Thus,

     sed "s/^/%TMP% /" somefile.txt

  will not prefix each line with (say) "C:\TEMP ", but will prefix
  each line with "C:TEMP "; sed will discard the backslash, which is
  probably not what you want. Other variables such as %PATH% and
  %COMSPEC% will also lose the backslash within sed scripts.

  Environment variables which do not use backslashes are usually
  workable. Thus, all the following should work without difficulty,
  if they are invoked from within DOS batch files:

     sed "s/=username=/%USER%/g" somefile.txt
     echo %FILENAME% | sed "s/\.TXT/.BAK/"
     grep -Ei "%string%" somefile.txt | sed "s/^/  /"

  while from either the DOS prompt or from within a batch file,

     sed "s/%%/ percent/g" input.fil >output.fil

  will replace each percent symbol in a file with " percent" (adding
  the leading space for readability).

4.9. How do I export or pass variables back into the environment?

4.9.1. - on Unix platforms

  Suppose that line #1, word #2 of the file 'terminals' contains a
  value to be put in your TERM environment variable. Sed cannot
  export variables directly to the shell, but it can pass strings to
  shell commands. To set a variable in the Bourne shell:

     TERM=`sed 's/^[^ ][^ ]* \([^ ][^ ]*\).*/\1/;q' terminals`;
     export TERM

  If the second word were "Wyse50", this would send the shell command
  "TERM=Wyse50".

4.9.2. - on MS-DOS or 4DOS platforms

  Sed cannot directly manipulate the environment. Under DOS, only
  batch files (.BAT) can do this, using the SET instruction, since
  they are run directly by the command shell. Under 4DOS, special
  4DOS commands (such as ESET) can also alter the environment.

  Under DOS or 4DOS, sed can select a word and pass it to the SET
  command. Suppose you want the 1st word of the 2nd line of MY.DAT
  put into an environment variable named %PHONE%. You might do this:

     @echo off
     sed -n "2 s/^\([^ ][^ ]*\) .*/SET PHONE=\1/p;3q" MY.DAT > GO_.BAT       |
     call GO_.BAT
     echo The environment variable for PHONE is %PHONE%
     :: cleanup
     del GO_.BAT

  The sed script assumes that the first character on the 2nd line is
  not a space and uses grouping \(...\) to save the first string of
  non-space characters as \1 for the RHS. In writing any batch files,
  make sure that output filenames such as GO_.BAT don't overwrite
  preexisting files of the same name.

4.10. How do I handle Unix shell quoting in sed?

  To embed a literal single quote (') in a script, use (a) or (b):

  (a) If possible, put the script in double quotes:

     sed "s/cannot/can't/g" file

  (b) If the script must use single quotes, then close-single-quote
  the script just before the SPECIAL single quote, prefix the single
  quote with a backslash, and use a 2nd pair of single quotes to
  finish marking the script. Thus:

     sed 's/cannot$/can'\''t/g' file

  Though this looks hard to read, it breaks down to 3 parts:

     's/cannot$/can'   \'   't/g'
     ---------------   --   -----

  To embed a literal double quote (") in a script, use (a) or (b):

  (a) If possible, put the script in single quotes. You don't need to
  prefix the double quotes with anything. Thus:

     sed 's/14"/fourteen inches/g' file

  (b) If the script must use double quotes, then prefix the SPECIAL
  double quote with a backslash (\). Thus,

     sed "s/$length\"/$length inches/g" file

  To embed a literal backslash (\) into a script, enter it twice:

     sed 's/C:\\DOS/D:\\DOS/g' config.sys

4.11. How do I delete a block of text if the block contains a certain
     regular expression?

  Suppose the beginning of the block is indicated by 'BLOCK_TOP' and
  the end of the block is indicated by 'BLOCK_END'. If the expression
  'regex' appears anywhere within the block, the entire block should
  be deleted. This script can be modified to match different types
  of block markers; it deletes the entire line containing the string
  'BLOCK_TOP' but preserves the rest of the line after 'BLOCK_END'.
  Written by Russell Davies <[email protected]>:

     :t
     /BLOCK_TOP/,/BLOCK_END/ {
        /BLOCK_END/!  { N; b t; }
        /regex/s/^.*BLOCK_END//
     }

4.12. How do I locate/print a paragraph of text if the paragraph
     contains a certain regular expression?

  Assume that paragraphs are separated by blank lines. For regexes
  that are single terms, use the following script:

     sed -e '/./{H;$!d;}' -e 'x;/regex/!d'

  To print paragraphs only if they contain 3 specific regular
  expressions (RE1, RE2, and RE3), in any order in the paragraph:

     sed -e '/./{H;$!d;}' -e 'x;/RE1/!d;/RE2/!d;/RE3/!d'

  With this solution and the preceding one, if the paragraphs are
  excessively long (more than 4k in length), you may overflow sed's
  internal buffers. If using HHsed, you must add a "G;" command
  immediately after the "x;" in the scripts above to defeat a bug
  in HHsed (see section 6.7.F(5), below, for a description).                 |

4.13. How do I delete a block of _specific_ consecutive lines?

  If the block of lines always looks like this (with '^' and '$'
  representing the beginning and end of line, respectively):

     ^able$
     ^baker$
     ^charlie$
     ^delta$

  and if there is never any deviation from this format (e.g., "able"
  *always* is followed by "baker", etc.), this will work fine:

     sed '/^able$/,/^delta$/d' files    # most seds                          |
     sed '/^able$/,+3d' files           # HHsed, sedmod, gsed 3.02.80        |

  However, if the top line sometimes appears alone or is followed by
  other lines, if the block may have additional lines in the middle,
  or if a partial block could possibly occur somewhere in the file, a
  more explicit script is needed.

  The following scripts show how to delete blocks of specific
  consecutive lines. Only an exact match of the block is deleted, and
  partial matches of the block are left alone.

     # sed script to delete 2 consecutive lines: /^RE1\nRE2$/
     $b
     /^RE1$/ {
       $!N
       /^RE1\nRE2$/d
       P;D
     }
     #---end of script---


     # sed script to delete 3 consecutive lines. (This script
     # fails under GNU sed earlier than version 3.02.)
     : more
     $!N
     s/\n/&/2;
     t enough
     $!b more
     : enough
     /^RE1\nRE2\nRE3$/d
     P;D
     #---end of script---

  For example, to delete a block of 5 consecutive lines, the previous
  script must be altered in only two places:

  (1) Change the 2 in "s/\n/&/2;" to a 4 (the trailing semicolon is
  needed to work around a bug in HHsed v1.5).

  (2) Change the regex line to "/^RE1\nRE2\nRE3\nRE4\nRE5$/d",
  modifying the expression as needed.

  Suppose we want to delete a block of two blank lines followed by
  the word "foo" followed by another blank line (4 lines in all).
  Other blank lines and other instances of "foo" should be left
  alone. After changing the '2' to a '3' (always one number less than
  the total number of lines), the regex line would look like this:
  "/^\n\nfoo\n$/d". (Thanks to Greg Ubben for this script.)

  As an alternative for older versions of GNU sed, the following
  script will delete 4 consecutive lines:

     # sed script to delete 4 consecutive lines (gsed-2.05 and below)
     /^RE1$/!b
     $!N
     $!N
     :a
     $b
     N
     /^RE1\nRE2\nRE3\nRE4$/d
     P
     s/^.*\n\(.*\n.*\n.*\)$/\1/
     ba
     #---end of script---

  Its drawback is that it must be modified in 3 places instead of 2
  to adapt it for more lines, and as additional lines are added, the
  's' command is forced to work harder to match the regexes. On the
  other hand, it avoids a problem with gsed-2.05 and shows another
  way to solve the problem of deleting consecutive lines.

4.14. How do I read (insert/add) a file at the top of a textfile?

  Given a textfile, file1, one may wish to prepend or insert an
  external file, fileT, to the top of it before processing the file.
  Normally, this should be done from the Unix or DOS shell before
  passing file1 on to sed (MS-DOS 5.0 or lower needs 3 commands to do
  this; for DOS 6.0 or higher, the MOVE command is available):

     copy fileT+file1 temp                   # MS-DOS command 1
     echo Y | copy temp file1                # MS-DOS command 2
     del temp                                # MS-DOS command 3
     cat fileT file1 >temp; mv temp file1    # Unix commands

  However, if inserting the file must be done from within sed, there
  is a way. The expected sed command "1 r fileT" will not work; it
  first prints line 1 and then inserts fileT between lines 1 and 2.
  The following two-line sed script solves this problem, although
  there must be at least 2 lines in file1 for the script to work
  properly:

     1{ h; r fileT; D; }
     2{ x; G; }

4.15. How do I address all the lines between RE1 and RE2, excluding
     the lines themselves?

  Normally, to address the lines between two regular expressions, RE1
  and RE2, one would do this: '/RE1/,/RE2/{commands;}'. Excluding
  those lines takes an extra step. To put 2 arrows before each line
  between RE1 and RE2, except for those lines:

     sed '1,/RE1/!{ /RE2/,/RE1/!s/^/>>/; }' input.fil

  The preceding script, though short, may be difficult to follow. It
  also requires that /RE1/ cannot occur on the first line of the
  input file. The following script, though it's not a one-liner, is
  easier to read and it permits /RE1/ to appear on the first line:

     /RE1/,/RE2/{
       /RE1/b
       /RE2/b
       s/^/>>/
     }

  Contents of input.fil:         Output of sed script:
     aaa                           aaa
     bbb                           bbb
     RE1                           RE1
     aaa                           >>aaa
     bbb                           >>bbb
     ccc                           >>ccc
     RE2                           RE2
     end                           end

4.16. How do I put "/some/path/here" into the LHS of a substitution?

  Technically, the normal meaning of the slash can be disabled by
  prefixing it with a backslash. Thus,

     sed 's/\/some\/path\/here/\/a\/new\/path/g' files

  But this is hard to read and write. There is a better solution.
  The s/// substitution command allows '/' to be replaced by any
  other character (including spaces or alphanumerics). Thus,

     sed 's|/some/path/here|/a/new/path|g' files

  and if you are using variable names in a Unix shell script,

     sed "s|$OLDPATH|$NEWPATH|g" oldfile >newfile

4.17. How do I replace "C:\SOME\DOS\PATH" in a substitution?

  For MS-DOS users, every backslash must be doubled. Thus, to replace
  "C:\SOME\DOS\PATH" with "D:\MY\NEW\PATH" --

     sed "s|C:\\SOME\\DOS\\PATH|D:\\MY\\NEW\\PATH|g" infile >outfile

  Remember that DOS pathnames are not case sensitive and can appear
  in upper or lower case in the input file. If this concerns you, use
  gsed v3.02 with the "i" flag or sedmod with the -i switch to ignore
  case on the LHS:

     @echo off
     :: sample MS-DOS batch file to alter path statements
     set old=C:\\SOME\\DOS\\PATH
     set new=D:\\MY\\NEW\\PATH
     gsed "s|%old%|%new%|gi" infile >outfile
     :: or
     ::     sedmod -i "s|%old%|%new%|g" infile >outfile
     set old=
     set new=

  Also, remember that under Win95 long filenames may be stored in two
  formats: e.g., as "C:\Program Files" or as "C:\PROGRA~1".

4.18. How do I convert files with toggle characters, like +this+, to
     look like [i]this[/i]?

  Input files, especially message-oriented text files, often contain
  toggle characters for emphasis, like ~this~, *this*, or =this=. Sed
  can make the same input pattern produce alternating output each
  time it is encountered. Typical needs might be to generate HMTL
  codes or print codes for boldface, italic, or underscore. This
  script accomodates multiple occurrences of the toggle pattern on
  the same line, as well as cases where the pattern starts on one
  line and finishes several lines later, even at the end of the file:

     # sed script to convert +this+ to [i]this[/i]
     :a
     /+/{ x;        # If "+" is found, switch hold and pattern space
       /^ON/{       # If "ON" is in the (former) hold space, then ..
         s///;      # .. delete it
         x;         # .. switch hold space and pattern space back
         s|+|[/i]|; # .. turn the next "+" into "[/i]"
         ba;        # .. jump back to label :a and start over
       }
     s/^/ON/;       # Else, "ON" was not in the hold space; create it
     x;             # Switch hold space and pattern space
     s|+|[i]|;      # Turn the first "+" into "[i]"
     ba;            # Branch to label :a to find another pattern
     }
     #---end of script---

  This script uses the hold space to create a "flag" to indicate
  whether the toggle is ON or not. We have added remarks to
  illustrate the script logic, but in most versions of sed remarks
  are not permitted after 'b'ranch commands or labels.

  If you are sure that the +toggle+ characters never cross line
  boundaries (i.e., never begin on one line and end on another), this
  script can be reduced to one line:

     s|+\([^+][^+]*\)+|[i]\1[/i]|g

  If your toggle pattern contains regex metacharacters (such as * and
  +, in the case of HHsed), remember to quote them with backslashes.

4.19. How do I delete only the first occurrence of a pattern?

  To delete only the first line that contains the pattern RE, where
  "RE" is any regular expression, but leave all other lines
  containing RE alone, do this:

     gsed '0,/RE/{//d}' file                     # GNU sed 3.02.80           |
     sed '/RE/{x;/Y/!{s/^/Y/;h;d;};x;}' file     # other seds

  And if you *know* the pattern will not occur on line 1 and you
  don't use GNU sed, this will work:

     sed '1,/RE/{/RE/d;}' file

4.20. How do I commify a string of numbers?

  Use the simplest script necessary to accomplish your task. As
  variations of the line increase, the sed script must become more
  complex to handle additional conditions. Whole numbers are
  simplest, followed by decimal formats, followed by embedded words.

  Case 1: simple strings of whole numbers separated by spaces or
  commas, with an optional negative sign. To convert this:

     4381, -1222333, and 70000: - 44555666 1234567890 words
     56890  -234567, and 89222  -999777  345888777666 chars

  to this:

     4,381, -1,222,333, and 70,000: - 44,555,666 1,234,567,890 words
     56,890  -234,567, and 89,222  -999,777  345,888,777,666 chars

  use one of these one-liners:

     sed ':a;s/\B[0-9]\{3\}\>/,&/;ta'                      # GNU sed
     sed -e :a -e 's/\(.*[0-9]\)\([0-9]\{3\}\)/\1,\2/;ta'  # other seds

  Case 2: strings of numbers which may have an embedded decimal
  point, separated by spaces or commas, with an optional negative
  sign. To change this:

     4381,  -6555.1212 and 70000,  7.18281828  44906982.071902
     56890   -2345.7778 and 8.0000:  -49000000 -1234567.89012

  to this:

     4,381,  -6,555.1212 and 70,000,  7.18281828  44,906,982.071902
     56,890   -2,345.7778 and 8.0000:  -49,000,000 -1,234,567.89012

  use the following command for GNU sed:

     sed ':a;s/\(^\|[^0-9.]\)\([0-9]\+\)\([0-9]\{3\}\)/\1\2,\3/g;ta'

  and for other versions of sed:

     sed -f case2.sed files

     # case2.sed
     s/^/ /;                 # add space to start of line
     :a
     s/\( [-0-9]\{1,\}\)\([0-9]\{3\}\)/\1,\2/g
     ta
     s/ //;                  # remove space from start of line
     #---end of script---

------------------------------

5. WHY ISN'T THIS WORKING?

5.1. Why don't my variables like $var get expanded in my sed script?

  Because your sed script uses 'single quotes' instead of "double
  quotes". Unix shells never expand $variables in single quotes.

  This is probably the most frequently-asked sed question. For more
  info on using variables, see section 4.8.

5.2. I'm using 'p' to print, but I have duplicate lines sometimes.

  Sed prints the entire file by default, so the 'p' command might
  cause the duplicate lines. If you want the whole file printed,
  try removing the 'p' from commands like 's/foo/bar/p'. If you want
  part of the file printed, run your sed script with -n flag to
  suppress normal output, and rewrite the script to get all output
  from the 'p' comand.

  If you're still getting duplicate lines, you are probably finding
  several matches for the same line. Suppose you want to print lines
  with the words "Peter" or "James" or "John", but not the same line
  twice. The following command will fail:

     sed -n '/Peter/p; /James/p; /John/p' files

  Since all 3 commands of the script are executed for each line,
  you'll get extra lines. A better way is to use the 'd' (delete) or
  'b' (branch) commands, like so (with GNU sed):

     sed '/Peter/b; /James/b; /John/b; d' files          # one way
     sed -n '/Peter/{p;d;};/James/{p;d;};/John/p' files  # a 2nd way
     sed -n '/Peter/{p;b;};/James/{p;b;};/John/p' files  # a 3rd way
     sed '/Peter\|James\|John/!d' files                  # best way :-)

  On standard seds, these must be broken down with -e commands:

     sed -e '/Peter/b' -e '/James/b' -e '/John/b' -e d files
     sed -n -e '/Peter/{p;d;}' -e '/James/{p;d;}' -e '/John/p' files

  The 3rd line would require too many -e commands to fit on one line,
  since standard versions of sed require an -e command after each 'b'
  and also after each closing brace '}'.

5.3. Why does my DOS version of sed process a file part-way through
    and then quit?

  First, look for errors in the script. Have you used the -n switch
  without telling sed to print anything to the console?  Have you
  read the docs to your version of sed to see if it has switches or a
  syntax you may have misused? If you are sure your sed script is
  valid, a probable cause is an end-of-file (EOF) marker embedded in
  the file. An EOF marker (a/k/a SUB) is a Control-Z character, with
  the values of 1A hex or 026 decimal. As soon as any DOS version of
  sed encounters a Ctrl-Z character, sed stops processing.

  To locate the EOF character, use Vern Buerg's shareware file viewer
  LIST.COM <http://www.buerg.com/list.html>. In text mode, look for a
  right-arrow symbol; in hex mode (Alt-H), look for a 1A code. With
  Unix utilities ported to DOS, use 'od' (octal dump) to display
  hexcodes in your file, and then use sed to locate the offending
  character:

     od -txC badfile.txt | sed -n "/ 1a /p; / 1a$/p"

  Then edit the input file to remove the offending character(s).

  If you would rather NOT edit the input file, there is still a fix.
  It requires the DJGPP 32-bit port of 'tr', the Unix translate
  program, ver 1.22. This version is included as one of the GNU text
  utilities, available at
     http://www.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2gnu/txt122b.zip
  It is important to get the DJGPP version of 'tr' because other
  versions ported to DOS will stop processing when they encounter the
  EOF character. Use the -d (delete) command:

     tr -d \32 < badfile.txt | sed -f myscript.sed

5.4. My RE isn't matching/deleting what I want it to. (Or, "Greedy vs.
    stingy pattern matching")

  The two most common causes for this problem are: (1) misusing the
  '.' metacharacter, and (2) misusing the '*' metacharacter. The RE
  '.*' is designed to be "greedy" (i.e., matching as many characters
  as possible). However, sometimes users need an expression which is
  "stingy," matching the shortest possible string.

  (1) On single-line patterns, the '.' metacharacter matches any
  single character on the line. ('.' cannot match the newline at the
  end of the line because the newline is removed when the line is put
  into the pattern space; sed adds a newline automatically when the
  pattern space is printed.) On multi-line patterns obtained with the
  'N' or 'G' commands, '.' _will_ match a newline in the middle of the
  pattern space. If there are 3 lines in the pattern space, "s/.*//"
  will delete all 3 lines, not just the first one (leaving 1 blank
  line, since the trailing newline is added to the output).

  Normal misuse of '.' occurs in trying to match a word or bounded
  field, and forgetting that '.' will also cross the field limits.
  Suppose you want to delete the first word in braces:

     echo {one} {two} {three} | sed 's/{.*}/{}/'       # fails
     echo {one} {two} {three} | sed 's/{[^}]*}/{}/'    # succeeds

  's/{.*}/{}/' is not the solution, since the regex '.' will match
  any character, including the close braces. Replace the '.' with
  '[^}]', which signifies a negated character set '[^...]' containing
  anything other than a right brace. FWIW, we know that 's/{one}/{}/'
  would also solve our question, but we're trying to illustrate the
  use of the negated character set: [^anything-but-this].

  A negated character set should be used for matching words between
  quote marks, for fields separated by commas, etc. See also section
  4.5 ("How do I parse a comma-delimited data file?"), above.

  (2) The '*' metacharacter represents zero or more instances of the
  previous expression. The '*' metacharacter looks for the leftmost
  possible match first and will match zero characters. Thus,

     echo foo | sed 's/o*/EEE/'

  will generate 'EEEfoo', not 'fEEE' as one might expect. This is
  because /o*/ matches the null string at the beginning of the word.

  After finding the leftmost possible match, the '*' is GREEDY; it
  always tries to match the longest possible string. When two or
  three instances of '.*' occur in the same RE, the leftmost instance
  will grab the most characters. Consider this example, which uses
  grouping '\(...\)' to save patterns:

     echo bar bat bay bet bit | sed 's/^.*\(b.*\)/\1/'

  What will be displayed is 'bit', never anything longer, because
  the leftmost '.*' took the longest possible match. Remember this
  rule: "leftmost match, longest possible string, zero also matches."

5.5. What is CSDPMI*B.ZIP and why do I need it?

  If you boot to MS-DOS instead of Windows and try to use GNU sed
  v1.18 or 3.02, you may encounter the following error message:

     no DPMI - Get csdpmi*b.zip

  "DPMI" stands for DOS Protected Mode Interface; it's basically a
  means of running DOS in Protected Mode (as opposed to Real Mode),
  which allows programs to share resources in extended memory without
  conflicting with one another. Running HIMEM.SYS and EMM386.EXE is
  not enough. The "CSDPMI*B.ZIP" refers to files written by Charles
  Sandmann to provide DPMI services for 32-bit computers (i.e.,
  386SX, 386DX, 486SX, etc.). Download this file:

     http://www.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2misc/csdpmi4b.zip
     ftp://ftp.cdrom.com/pub/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2misc/csdpmi4b.zip

  and extract CWSDPMI.EXE, CWSDPR0.EXE and CWSPARAM.EXE from the ZIP
  file. Put all 3 CWS*.EXE files in the same directory as GSED.EXE
  and you're all set. There are DOC files enclosed, but they're
  nearly incomprehensible for the average computer user. (Another
  case of user-vicious documentation.)

  If you're running Windows and you normally use a DOS session to run
  GNU sed (i.e., you get to a DOS prompt with a resizable window or
  you press Alt-Enter to switch to full-screen mode), you don't need
  the CWS*.EXE files at all, since Windows uses DPMI already.

5.6. Where are the man pages for GNU sed?

  Prior to GNU sed v3.02, there weren't any. Until recently, man
  pages distributed with gsed were borrowed from old sources or from
  other compilations. None of them were "official." Even the man and
  info pages distributed with gsed 3.02 are incomplete. For example,
  they omit special regexes recognized by GNU sed not in most seds.
  See section 6.8.3 ("Special syntax in REs"), below.

5.7. How do I tell what version of sed I am using?

  Try entering "sed" all by itself on the command line, followed by
  no arguments or parameters.  Also, try "sed --version".  In a
  pinch, you can also try this:

     strings sed | grep -i ver

  Your version of 'strings' must be a version of the Unix utility of
  this name. It should not be the DOS utility STRINGS.COM by Douglas
  Boling.

5.8. Does sed issue an exit code?

  Most versions of sed do not, but check the documentation that came
  with whichever version you are using. GNU sed issues an exit code
  of 0 if the program terminated normally, 1 if there were errors in
  the script, and 2 if there were errors during script execution.

5.9. The 'r' command isn't inserting the file into the text.

  On most versions of sed (except HHsed and gsed-3.02), the 'r'
  (read) and 'w' (write) commands must be followed by exactly one
  space, then the filename, and then terminated by a newline. Any
  additional characters before or after the filename are interpreted
  as being part of the filename. Thus "/RE/r  insert.me" would try to
  locate a file called ' insert.me' (note the leading space!). If the
  file was not found, sed says nothing -- not even an error message.

  When sed scripts are used on the command line, every 'r' and 'w'
  must be the last command in that part of the script. Thus,

    sed -e '/regex/{r insert.file;d;}' source         # will fail
    sed -e '/regex/{r insert.file' -e 'd;}' source    # will succeed

5.10. Why can't I match 2 or more lines using the \n character?

  This is a constant FAQ for new sed users. Sed normally processes
  only one line at a time, so the newline is never "located" under
  typical use. The default behavior of sed is to read one line into
  the "pattern space", then to print, change, or delete that line,
  and then to get the next line from the input file (or from the
  standard input stream, if you're using sed at the end of a pipe).

  To match two or more consecutive lines, you must either use address
  ranges (see section 3.3, above), which match all the lines between
  two specified addresses, or you must explicitly add the next line to
  the pattern space by using the 'N' command (or something
  functionally similar).

  Address ranges match each line in the range one at a time, so you
  still can't use the \n there. However, it _can_ match a block of
  consecutive lines, so it may be that you don't need the \n to find
  what you're looking for. The 'N' command, on the other hand, will
  gather multiple lines into the pattern space at once, and this is
  where the \n character can be used.

  An example of using 'N' to accumulate and delete a block of 2 or
  more lines appears in section 4.13 ("How do I delete a block of
  _specific_ consecutive lines?"). This example can be modified by
  changing the delete command to something else, like 'p' (print),
  'i' (insert), 'c' (change), 'a' (append), or 's' (substitute).

------------------------------

6. OTHER ISSUES

6.1. I have a certain problem that stumps me. Where can I get help?

  Newsgroups:

     - alt.comp.editors.batch  (best choice)
     - comp.editors
     - comp.unix.questions
     - comp.unix.shell

  Send e-mail to:  [email protected]                           |

  Your question will be posted on the "sed-users" mailing list, where        |
  many sed users will be able to see your question. Sending your             |
  question will not automatically subscribe you to the list.                 |

6.2. How does sed compare with awk, perl, and other utilities?

  Awk is a much richer language with many features of a programming
  language, including variable names, math functions, arrays, system
  calls, etc. Its command structure is similar to sed:

     address { command(s) }

  which means that for each line or range of lines that matches the
  address, execute the command(s). In both sed and awk, an address
  can be a line number or a RE somewhere on the line, or both.

  In program size, awk is 3-10 times larger than sed. Awk has most
  of the functions of sed, but not all. Notably, sed supports
  backreferences (\1, \2, ...) to previous expressions, and awk does
  not have any comparable function or syntax.

  Perl is a general-purpose programming language, with many features
  beyond text processing and interprocess communication, taking it
  well past awk or other scripting languages. Perl supports every
  feature sed does and has its own set of extended regular
  expressions, which give it extensive power in pattern matching and
  processing. (Note: the standard perl distribution comes with 's2p',
  a perl script which translates sed scripts into equivalent perl
  scripts.) Like sed and awk, perl scripts do not need to be compiled
  into binary code. Like sed, perl can also run many useful
  "one-liners" from the command line, though with greater
  flexibility; see question 4.3 ("How do I make substitutions in
  every file in a directory, or in a complete directory tree?").

  On the other hand, the current version of perl is from 8 to 35
  times larger than sed in its executables alone (perl's library
  modules and allied files not included!). Further, for most simple
  tasks such as substitution, sed executes more quickly than either
  perl or awk. All these utilities serve to process input text,
  transforming it to meet our needs . . . or our arbitrary whims.

6.3. When should I use sed?

  When you need a small, fast program to modify words, lines, or
  blocks of lines in a textfile.

6.4. When should I NOT use sed?

  You should not use sed when you have "dedicated" tools which can do
  the job faster or with an easier syntax. Do not use sed when you
  only want to:

  - delete individual characters. Instead of "s/[abcd]//g", use

       tr -d "[a-d]"

  - squeeze sequential characters. Instead of "s/ee*/e/g", use

       tr -s "{character-set}"

  - change individual characters. Instead of "y/abcdef/ABCDEF/", use

       tr "[a-f]" "[A-F]"

  - print individual lines, based on patterns within the line itself.
    Instead, use "grep".

  - print blocks of lines, with 1 or more lines of context above
    and/or below a specific regular expression. Instead, use the GNU
    version of grep as follows:

       grep -A{number} -B{number}

  - remove individual lines, based on patterns within the line
    itself. Instead, use "grep -v".

  - print line numbers.  Instead, use "nl" or "cat -n".

  - reformat lines or paragraphs. Instead, use "fold", "fmt" or "par".

  Though sed can perfectly emulate certain functions of cat, grep,
  nl, rev, sort, tac, tail, tr, uniq, and other utilities, producing
  identical output, the native utilities are usually optimized to do
  the job more quickly than sed.

6.5. When should I ignore sed and use Awk or Perl instead?

  If you can write the same script in Awk or Perl and do it in less
  time, then use Perl or Awk. There's no reason to spend an hour
  writing and debugging a sed script if you can do it in Perl in 10
  minutes (assuming that you know Perl already) and if the processing
  time or memory use is not a factor. Don't hunt pheasants with a .22
  if you have a shotgun at your side . . . unless you simply enjoy
  the challenge!

  Specifically, if you need to:

  - heavily comment what your scripts do. Use GNU sed, awk, or perl.
  - do case insensitive searching. Use gsed302, sedmod, awk or perl.
  - count fields (words) in a line. Use awk.
  - count lines in a block or objects in a file. Use awk.
  - check lengths of strings or do math operations. Use awk or perl.
  - handle very long lines or need very large buffers. Use gsed or perl.
  - handle binary data (control characters). Use perl (binmode).
  - loop through an array or list. Use awk or perl.
  - test for file existence, filesize, or fileage. Use perl or shell.
  - treat each paragraph as a line. Use awk or perl.                         |
  - indicate /alternate|options/ in regexes. Use gsed, awk or perl.          |
  - use syntax like \xNN to match hex codes. Use gsed-3.02.80 or perl.       |
  - use (nested (regexes)) with backreferences. Use perl.

  Perl lovers: I know that perl can do everything awk can do, but
  please don't write me to complain. Why heft a shotgun when a .45
  will do? As we all know, "There is more than one way to do it."

6.6. Known limitations among sed versions

  Limits on distributed versions, although source code for most
  versions of free sed allows for modification and recompilation.
  The term "no limit" when used below means there is no "fixed"
  limit. Limits are actually determined by one's hardware, memory,
  operating system, and which C library is used to compile sed.

6.6.1. Maximum line length

     GNU sed 3.02: no limit
     GNU sed 2.05: no limit
     sedmod 1.0:   4096 bytes
     HHsed:        4000 bytes

6.6.2. Maximum size for all buffers (pattern space + hold space)

     GNU sed 3.02: no limit
     GNU sed 2.05: no limit
     sedmod 1.0:   4096 bytes
     HHsed:        4000 bytes

6.6.3. Maximum number of files that can be read with read command

     GNU sed 3.02: no limit
     GNU sed 2.05: total no. of r and w commands may not exceed 32
     sedmod 1.0:   total no. of r and w commands may not exceed 20

6.6.4. Maximum number of files that can be written with 'w' command

     GNU sed 3.02: no limit (but typical Unix is 253)
     GNU sed 2.05: total no. of r and w commands may not exceed 32
     sedmod 1.0:   10
     HHsed:        10

6.6.5. Limits on length of label names

     BSD sed:      8 characters
     GNU sed 3.02: no limit
     GNU sed 2.05: no limit
     HHsed:        no limit

6.6.6. Limits on length of write-file names

     BSD sed:      40 characters
     GNU sed 3.02: no limit
     GNU sed 2.05: no limit
     HHsed:        no limit

6.6.7. Limits on branch/jump commands

     HHsed:        50

  As a practical consequence, this means that HHsed will not read
  more than 50 lines into the pattern space via an N command, even if
  the pattern space is only a few hundred bytes in size. HHsed exits
  with an error message, "infinite branch loop at line {nn}".

6.7. Known bugs among sed versions

A. GNU sed v3.02.80                                                           |

  None known.                                                                |

B. GNU sed v3.02                                                              |

  (1) Affects only v3.02 binaries compiled with DJGPP for MS-DOS and
  MS-Windows: 'l' (list) command does not display a lone carriage
  return (0x0D, ^M) embedded in a line.

C. GNU sed v2.05                                                              |

  (1) If a number follows the substitute command (e.g., s/f/F/10) and
  the number exceeds the possible matches on the pattern space, the
  command 't label' _always_ jumps to the specified label. 't' should
  jump only if the substitution was successful (or returned "true").

  (2) 'l' (list) command does not convert the following characters to
  hex values, but passes them through unchanged: 0xF7, 0xFB, 0xFC,
  0xFD, 0xFE.

  (3) A range address like "/foo/,14d" should delete every line from
  the first occurrence of "foo" until line 14, inclusive, and then if
  /foo/ occurs thereafter, delete only those lines. In gsed 2.05, if
  a second "foo" occurs in the file, that line and everything to the
  end of file will be deleted (since gsed is looking for line 14 to
  occur again!).

  (4) The regex /\'/ is not interpreted as an apostrophe or a single
  quote mark, as it should be. Instead, it is interpreted as $,
  representing the end-of-line! This can be proven by these tests:

     echo hello | gsed "/\'/d"        # entire line is deleted!
     echo hello | gsed "s/\'/YYY/"    # 'YYY' appended to string

  (5) Multiple occurrences of the 'w' command fail, as shown here,
  given that both "aaa" and "bbb" occur within the file:

     gsed -e "/aaa/w FILE" -e "/bbb/w FILE" input.txt

D. GNU sed v1.18                                                              |

  (1) same as #1 for GNU sed v2.05, above.

  (2) The following command will lock the computer under Win95. Echos
  is an echo command that does not issue a trailing newline:

     echos any_word | gsed "s/[ ]*$//"

  (3) same as #3 for GNU sed v2.05, above.

E. GNU sed v1.03 (by Frank Whaley)                                            |

  (1) The \w and \W escape sequences both match only nonword
  characters. \w is misdefined and should match word characters.

  (2) The underscore is defined as a nonword character; it should be
  defined as a word character.

  (3) same as #3 for GNU sed v2.05, above.

F. HHsed v1.5 (by Howard Helman)                                              |

  (1) If a number follows the substitute command (e.g., s/foo/bar/2),
  in a sed script entered from the command line, two semicolons must
  follow the number, or they must be separated by an -e switch.
  Normally, only 1 semicolon is needed to separate commands.

     echo bit bet | HHsed "s/b/n/2;;s/b/B/"          # solution 1
     echo bit bet | HHsed -e "s/b/n/2" -e "s/b/B"    # solution 2

  (2) If the substitute command is followed by a number and a "p"
  flag, when the -n switch is used, the "p" flag must occur first.

     echo aaa | HHsed -n "s/./B/3p"    # bug! nothing prints
     echo aaa | HHsed -n "s/./B/p3"    # prints "aaB" as expected

  (3) The following commands will cause HHsed to lock the computer
  under MS-DOS or Win95. Note that they occur because of malformed
  regular expressions which will match no characters.

     sed -n "p;s/\<//g;" file
     sed -n "p;s/[char-set]*//g;" file

  (4) The range command '/RE1/,/RE2/' in HHsed will match one line if
  both regexes occur on the same line (see section 6.8.5, below).
  Though this could be construed as a feature, it should probably be
  considered a bug since its operation differs from every other
  version of sed. For example, '/----/,/----/{s/^/>>/;}' should put
  two angle brackets ">>" before every line which is sandwiched
  between a row of 4 or more hyphens. With HHsed, this command will
  only prefix the hyphens themselves with the angle brackets.

  (5) If the hold space is empty, the H command copies the pattern
  space to the hold space but fails to prepend a leading newline. The
  H command is supposed to add a newline, followed by the contents of
  the pattern space, to the hold space at all times. A workaround is
  "{G;s/^\(.*\)\(\n\)$/\2\1/;H;s/\n$//;}", but it requires knowing
  that the hold space is empty and using the command only once.
  Another alternative is to use the G or the A command alone at key
  points in the script.

  (6) If grouping is followed by an '*' or '+' operator, HHsed does
  not match the pattern, but issues no warning. See below:

     echo aaa | HHsed "/\(a\)*/d"      # nothing is deleted
     echo aaa | HHsed "/\(a\)+/d"      # nothing is deleted
     echo aaa | HHsed "s/\(a\)*/\1B/"  # nothing is changed
     echo aaa | HHsed "s/\(a\)+/\1B/"  # nothing is changed

  (7) If grouping is followed by an interval expression, HHsed halts
  with the error message "garbled command", in all of the following
  examples:

     echo aaa | HHsed "/\(a\)\{3\}/d"
     echo aaa | HHsed "/\(a\)\{1,5\}/d"
     echo aaa | HHsed "s/\(a\)\{3\}/\1B/"

  (8) In interval expressions, 0 is not supported. E.g., \{0,3\)

G. sedmod v1.0 (by Hern Chen)                                                 |

  Technically, the following are limits (or features?) of sedmod, not
  bugs, since the docs for sedmod do not claim to support these
  missing features.

  (1) sedmod does not support standard range arguments \{...\}
  present in nearly all versions of sed.

  (2) If grouping is followed by an '*' or '+' operator, sedmod gives
  a "garbled command" message. However, if the grouped expressions
  are strings literals with no metacharacters, a partial workaround
  can be done like so:

     \(string\)\1*    # matches 1 or more instances of 'string'
     \(string\)\1+    # matches 2 or more instances of 'string'

  (3) sedmod does not support a numeric argument after the s///
  command, as in 's/a/b/3', present in nearly all versions of sed.

  The following are bugs in sedmod v1.0:

  (4) When the -i (ignore case) switch is used, the '/regex/d'
  command is not properly obeyed. Sedmod may miss one or more lines
  matching the expression, regardless of where they occur in the
  script. Workaround: use "/regex/{d;}" instead.

H. HP-UX sed                                                                  |

  (1) Versions of HP-UX sed up to and including version 10.20 are
  buggy. According to the README file, which comes with the GNU cc
  at <ftp://ftp.ntua.gr/pub/gnu/sed-2.05.bin.README>:

  "When building gcc on a hppa*-*-hpux10 platform, the `fixincludes'
  step (which involves running a sed script) fails because of a bug
  in the vendor's implementation of sed.  Currently the only known
  workaround is to install GNU sed before building gcc.  The file
  sed-2.05.bin.hpux10 is a precompiled binary for that platform."

I. SunOS 4.1 sed                                                              |

  (1) Bug occurs in RE pattern matching when a non-null '[char-set]*'
  is followed by a null '\NUM' pattern recall, illustrated here and
  reported by Greg Ubben:

     s/\(a\)\(b*\)cd\1[0-9]*\2foo/bar/  # between '[0-9]*' and '\2'
     s/\(a\{0,1\}\).\{0,1\}\1/bar/      # between '.\{0,1\}' and '\1'

  Workaround: add a do-nothing 'X*' expression which will not match
  any characters on the line between the two components. E.g.,

     s/\(a\)\(b*\)cd\1[0-9]*X*\2foo/bar/
     s/\(a\{0,1\}\).\{0,1\}X*\1/bar/

J. SunOS 5.6 sed                                                              |

  (1) If grouping is followed by an asterisk, SunOS sed does not match
  the null string, which it should do. The following command:

     echo foo | sed 's/f\(NO-MATCH\)*/g\1/'

  should transform "foo" to "goo" under normal versions of sed.

K. Ultrix 4.3 sed                                                             |

  (1) If grouping is followed by an asterisk, Ultrix sed replies with
  "command garbled", as shown in the following example:

     echo foo | sed 's/f\(NO-MATCH\)*/g\1/'

  (2) If grouping is followed by a numeric operator such as \{0,9\},
  Ultrix sed does not find the match.

L. Digital Unix sed                                                           |

  (1) The following comes from the man pages for sed distributed with
  new, 1998 versions of Digital Unix (reformatted to fit our
  margins):

  [Digital]  The h subcommand for sed does not work properly.  When
  you use the  h subcommand to place text into the hold area, only
  the last line of the specified text is saved.  You can use the H
  subcommand to append text to the hold area. The H subcommand and
  all others dealing with the hold area work correctly.

  (2) "$d" command issues an error message, "cannot parse".  Reported
  by Carlos Duarte on 8 June 1998.

6.8. Known incompatibilities between sed versions

6.8.1. Issuing commands from the command line

  Most versions of sed permit multiple commands to issued on the
  command line, separated by a semicolon (;). Thus,

     sed 'G;G' file

  should triple-space a file. However, certain commands REQUIRE
  separate expressions on the command line. These include:

     - all labels (':a', ':more', etc.)
     - all branching instructions ('b', 't')
     - commands to read and write files ('r' and 'w')
     - any closing brace, '}'

  If these commands are used, they must be the LAST commands of an
  expression. Subsequent commands must use another expression
  (another -e switch plus arguments).  E.g.,

     sed  -e :a -e 's/^.\{1,77\}$/ &/;ta' -e 's/\( *\)\1/\1/' files

  GNU sed and HHsed v1.5 allow these commands to be followed by a
  semicolon, and the previous script can be written like this:

     sed  ':a;s/^.\{1,77\}$/ &/;ta;s/\( *\)\1/\1/' files

  Versions differ in implementing the 'a' (append), 'c' (change), and
  'i' (insert) commands:

     sed "/foo/i New text here"              # HHsed/sedmod/gsed-30280       |
     gsed -e "/foo/i\\" -e "New text here"   # GNU sed
     sed1 -e "/foo/i" -e "New text here"     # one version of sed
     sed2 "/foo/i\ New text here"            # another version

6.8.2. Using comments (prefixed by the '#' sign)

  Most versions of sed permit comments to appear in sed scripts only
  on the first line of the script. Comments on line 2 or thereafter
  are not recognized and will generate an error like "unrecognized
  command" or "command [bad-line-here] has trailing garbage".

  GNU sed, HHsed, sedmod, and HP-UX sed permit comments to appear on
  any line of the script, except after labels and branching commands
  (b,t), *provided* that a semicolon (;) occurs after the command
  itself. This syntax makes sed similar to awk and perl, which use a
  similar commenting structure in their scripts.  Thus,

     # GNU style sed script
     $!N;                        # except for last line, get next line
     s/^\([0-9]\{5\}\).*\n\1.*//;    # if first 5 digits of each line
                                     # match, delete BOTH lines.
     t skip
     P;                              # print 1st line only if no match
     :skip
     D;                    # delete 1st line of pattern space and loop
     #---end of script---

  is a valid script for GNU sed and Helman's sed, but is unrecognized
  for most other versions of sed.

6.8.3. Special syntax in REs

A. GNU sed v2.05 and higher versions                                          |

  BEGIN~STEP selection: GNU sed can select a series of lines in the
  form M~N, where M and N are integers (with gsed v2.05, M must be
  less than N). Beginning at line M (M may equal 0), every Nth line
  is selected. Thus,

     gsed '1~3d' file    # delete every 3d line, starting with line 1
                         # deletes lines 1, 4, 7, 10, 13, 16, ...

     gsed -n '2~5p' file # print every 5th line, starting with line 2
                         # prints lines 2, 7, 12, 17, 22, 27, ...

  With gsed v3.02, M may be any valid line number. With gsed v2.05,
  if M is greater than or equal to N (the STEP value), nothing will
  be selected, except in one pointless case, 0~0, which selects every
  line.

  The following expressions can be used for /RE/ addresses or in the
  LHS side of a substitution:

     \`  - matches the beginning of the pattern space (same as "^")
     \'  - matches the end of the pattern space (same as "$")
     \?  - 0 or 1 occurrences of previous character: same as \{0,1\}
     \+  - 1 or more occurrences of previous character: same as \{1,\}
     \|  - matches the string on either side, e.g., foo\|bar
     \b  - boundary between word and nonword chars (reversible)
     \B  - boundary between 2 word or between 2 nonword chars
     \n  - embedded newline (usable after N, G, or similar commands)
     \w  - any word character: [A-Za-z0-9_]
     \W  - any nonword char: [^A-Za-z0-9_]
     \<  - boundary between nonword and word character
     \>  - boundary between word and nonword character

  On \b, \B, \<, and \>, see section 6.8.4 ("Word boundaries"),
  below.

  Beginning with version 3.02.80, the following escape sequences can         |
  now be used on both sides of a "s///" substitution:                        |

     \a      "alert" beep     (BEL, Ctrl-G, 0x07)                            |
     \f      formfeed         (FF, Ctrl-L, 0x0C)                             |
     \n      newline          (LF, Ctrl-J, 0x0A)                             |
     \r      carriage-return  (CR, Ctrl-M, 0x0D)                             |
     \t      horizontal tab   (HT, Ctrl-I, 0x09)                             |
     \v      vertical tab     (VT, Ctrl-K, 0x0B)                             |
     \oNNN   a character with the octal value NNN                            |
     \dNNN   a character with the decimal value NNN                          |
     \xNN    a character with the hexadecimal value NN                       |

  Note that gsed does not have any syntax for designating characters
  in octal or hex notation. Traditionally, \ooo or \hh or \xhh have
  been used by the GNU project to do this, but they are not (yet)
  implemented in gsed. Note that GNU sed also supports "character
  classes", a POSIX extension to regexes, described in section 3.7,
  above.

B. GNU sed v1.03 (by Frank Whaley)

  When used with the -x (extended) switch on the command line, or
  when '#x' occurs as the first line of a script, Whaley's gsed103
  supports the following expressions in both the LHS and RHS of a
  substitution:

     \|      matches the expression on either side
     ?       0 or 1 occurrences of previous RE: same as \{0,1\}
     +       1 or more occurrence of previous RE: same as \{1,\}
     \a      "alert" beep     (BEL, Ctrl-G, 0x07)                            |
     \b      backspace        (BS, Ctrl-H, 0x08)                             |
     \f      formfeed         (FF, Ctrl-L, 0x0C)                             |
     \n      newline          (LF, Ctrl-J, 0x0A)                             |
     \r      carriage-return  (CR, Ctrl-M, 0x0D)                             |
     \t      horizontal tab   (HT, Ctrl-I, 0x09)                             |
     \v      vertical tab     (VT, Ctrl-K, 0x0B)                             |
     \bBBB   binary char, where BBB are 1-8 binary digits, [0-1]
     \dDDD   decimal char, where DDD are 1-3 decimal digits, [0-9]
     \oOOO   octal char, where OOO are 1-3 octal digits, [0-7]               |
     \xXX    hex char, where XX are 1-2 hex digits, [0-9A-F]

  In normal mode, with or without the -x switch, the following escape
  sequences are also supported in regex addressing or in the LHS of a
  substitution:

     \`      matches beginning of pattern space: same as /^/
     \'      matches end of pattern space: same as /$/
     \B      boundary between 2 word or 2 nonword characters
     \w      any nonword character [*BUG!* should be a word char]
     \W      any nonword character: same as /[^A-Za-z0-9]/
     \<      boundary between nonword and word char
     \>      boundary between word and nonword char

C. HHsed v1.5 (by Howard Helman)

  The following expressions can be used for /RE/ addresses or in the
  LHS and RHS side of a substitution:

     +    - 1 or more occurrences of previous RE: same as \{1,\}
     \a   - bell         (ASCII 07, 0x07)
     \b   - backspace    (ASCII 08, 0x08)
     \e   - escape       (ASCII 27, 0x1B)
     \f   - formfeed     (ASCII 12, 0x0C)
     \n   - newline      (printed as 2 bytes, 0D 0A or ^M^J, in DOS)
     \r   - return       (ASCII 13, 0x0D)
     \t   - tab          (ASCII 09, 0x09)
     \v   - vertical tab (ASCII 11, 0x0B)
     \xhh - the ASCII character corresponding to 2 hex digits hh.
     \<   - boundary between nonword and word character
     \>   - boundary between word and nonword character

D. sedmod v1.0 (by Hern Chen)

  The following expressions can be used for /RE/ addresses in the LHS
  of a substitution:

     +    - 1 or more occurrences of previous RE: same as \{1,\}
     \a   - any alphanumeric: same as [a-zA-Z0-9]
     \A   - 1 or more alphas: same as \a+
     \d   - any digit: same as [0-9]
     \D   - 1 or more digits: same as \d+
     \h   - any hex digit: same as [0-9a-fA-F]
     \H   - 1 or more hexdigits: same as \h+
     \l   - any letter: same as [A-Za-z]
     \L   - 1 or more letters: same as \l+
     \n   - newline      (read as 2 bytes, 0D 0A or ^M^J, in DOS)
     \s   - any whitespace character: space, tab, or vertical tab
     \S   - 1 or more whitespace chars: same as \s+
     \t   - tab          (ASCII 09, 0x09)
     \<   - boundary between nonword and word character
     \>   - boundary between word and nonword character

  The following expressions can be used in the RHS of a substitution.
  "Elements" refer to \1 .. \9, &, $0, or $1 .. $9:

     &    - insert regexp defined on LHS
     \e   - end case conversion of next element
     \E   - end case conversion of remaining elements
     \l   - change next element to lower case
     \L   - change remaining elements to lower case
     \n   - newline      (printed as 2 bytes, 0D 0A or ^M^J, in DOS)
     \t   - tab          (ASCII 09, 0x09)
     \u   - change next element to upper case
     \U   - change remaining elements to upper case
     $0   - insert pattern space BEFORE the substitution
     $1-$9 - match Nth word on the pattern space

E. UnixDos sed

  The following expressions can be used in text, LHS, and RHS:

     \n   - newline      (printed as 2 bytes, 0D 0A or ^M^J, in DOS)

6.8.4. Word boundaries

  GNU sed, HHsed, and sedmod use certain symbols to define the
  boundary between a "word character" and a nonword character. A word
  character fits the regex "[A-Za-z0-9_]". Note: a word character
  includes the underscore "_" but not the hyphen, probably because
  the underscore is permissible as a label in sed and in other
  scripting languages. (In gsed103, a word character did NOT include
  the underscore; it included alphanumerics only.)

  These symbols include '\<' and '\>' (gsed, HHsed, sedmod) and '\b'
  and '\B' (gsed only). Note that the boundary symbols do not
  represent a character, but a position on the line. Word boundaries
  are used with literal characters or character sets to let you match
  (and delete or alter) whole words without affecting the spaces or
  punctuation marks outside of those words. They can only be used in
  a "/pattern/" address or in the LHS of a 's/LHS/RHS/' command. The
  following table shows how these symbols may be used in HHsed and
  GNU sed. Sedmod matches the syntax of HHsed.

     Match position      Possible word boundaries   HHsed   GNU sed
     ---------------------------------------------------------------
     start of word    [nonword char]^[word char]      \<    \< or \b
     end of word         [word char]^[nonword char]   \>    \> or \b
     middle of word      [word char]^[word char]     none      \B
     outside of word  [nonword char]^[nonword char]  none      \B
     ---------------------------------------------------------------

6.8.5. Range addressing with GNU sed and HHsed

  When addressing a range of lines, as in the following example to
  delete all lines between /RE1/ and /RE2/,

     sed '/RE1/,/RE2/d' file

  if /RE1/ and /RE2/ both occur on the *same* line, HHsed will delete
  that single line and then look forward in the file for the next
  occurrence of /RE1/ to attempt the deletion. GNU sed will match the
  first line containing /RE1/ but will look forward to the next and
  succeeding lines to match /RE2/. If /RE1/ and /RE2/ cannot be found
  on two different lines, nothing will be deleted.

  GNU sed v2.05 has a bug in range addressing (see section 6.7.C(3),         |
  above). This was fixed in gsed v3.02.                                      |

  GNU sed v3.02.80 supports 0 in range addressing, which means that          |
  the range "0,/RE/" will match every line from the top of the file          |
  to the first line containing /RE/, inclusive, and if /RE/ occurs on        |
  the first line of the file, only line 1 will be matched.                   |

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