Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers sed option to delete two words within a file Post 19638 by inpavan on Monday 15th of April 2002 04:41:47 AM
Old 04-15-2002
Are you trying to delete the line containing the word(s) or trying to delte the words only.

sed 's/yourword//g' yourfile > newfile - To delte the words only
sed 's/yourword/d' yourfile > new file - to delte the line containing the words

Use - s/firstword.*secondword//g - For matching two words.

Hope this is useful.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

sed [delete everything between two words]

Hi, I have the following codes below that aims to delete every words between two pattern word. Say I have the files To delete every word between WISH_LIST=" and " I used the below codes (but its not working): #!/bin/sh sed ' /WISH_LIST=\"/ { N /\n.*\"/ {... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Orbix
3 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

How to delete first 10 words from file

Hi, Could you please let me know, how to delete first 10 words from text files using vi? 10dw will delete it from current line, how to do it for all the lines from file? Thanks (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: sentak
6 Replies

3. Solaris

option to delete .tar file while extracting

Is there an option in tar which deletes the .tar file as soon as it is successfully extracted. (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: vickylife
5 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Need to delete words in a file

Hi All, I have an input file a.txt which contains the following :: 08-08-09 1:00 PM 763763762 f00_unix1_server.txt i Just need to delete all the words which is before f Output :: f00_unix1_server.txt Thanks (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: raghav1982
4 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

sed/awk: Delete matching words leaving only the first instance

I have an input text that looks like this (comes already sorted): on Caturday 22 at 10:15, some event on Caturday 22 at 10:15, some other event on Caturday 22 at 21:30, even more events on Funday 23 at 11:00, yet another event I need to delete all the matching words between the lines, from... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: GrinningArmor
2 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

sed how to delete between two words within a file

I'm hoping someone could help me out please :) I have several .txt files with several hundred lines in each that look like this: 10241;</td><td>10241</td><td class="b">x2801;</td><td>2801</td><td>TEXT-1</td></tr> 10242;</td><td>10242</td><td... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: martinsmith
4 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Using Sed to Delete Words in a File

This is a Nagios situation. So i have a list of servers in one file called Servers.txt And in another file called hostgroups.cfg, i want to remove each and every one of the servers in the Servers.txt file. The problem is, the script I wrote is having a problem removing the exact servers in... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: SkySmart
5 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

SED - delete words between two possible words

Hi all, I want to make an script using sed that removes everything between 'begin' (including the line that has it) and 'end1' or 'end2', not removing this line. Let me paste an 2 examples: anything before any string begin few lines of content end1 anything after anything before any... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: meuser
4 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

sed delete option

I have tried doing this to delete some lines: sed '1,10d' file Now I want to specify a variable as a line number for example: lastline=wc -l file linestart=$lastline - 20 sed '$linestart,$lastlined' file but this will give error: sed: -e expression #1, char 3: extra characters after... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: zorrox
4 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

sed not applying /d "delete line" option

So I'm on an AIX machine. And sed is not applying /d "delete line" option when I also include match word options \< and \> examples... echo cat | sed '/\<cat\>/d'will return cat for some reason echo cat | sed "/\<cat\>/d"will also still return cat. Of course i can just run echo cat... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: escooter87
9 Replies
SPELL(1)						      General Commands Manual							  SPELL(1)

NAME
spell, spellin, spellout - find spelling errors SYNOPSIS
spell [ -v ] [ -b ] [ -x ] [ -d hlist ] [ -s hstop ] [ -h spellhist ] [ file ] ... spellin [ list ] spellout [ -d ] list DESCRIPTION
Spell collects words from the named documents, and looks them up in a spelling list. Words that neither occur among nor are derivable (by applying certain inflections, prefixes or suffixes) from words in the spelling list are printed on the standard output. If no files are named, words are collected from the standard input. Spell ignores most troff, tbl and eqn(1) constructions. Under the -v option, all words not literally in the spelling list are printed, and plausible derivations from spelling list words are indi- cated. Under the -b option, British spelling is checked. Besides preferring centre, colour, speciality, travelled, etc., this option insists upon -ise in words like standardise, Fowler and the OED to the contrary notwithstanding. Under the -x option, every plausible stem is printed with `=' for each word. The spelling list is based on many sources. While it is more haphazard than an ordinary dictionary, it is also more effective with proper names and popular technical words. Coverage of the specialized vocabularies of biology, medicine and chemistry is light. The auxiliary files used for the spelling list, stop list, and history file may be specified by arguments following the -d, -s, and -h options. The default files are indicated below. Copies of all output may be accumulated in the history file. The stop list filters out misspellings (e.g. thier=thy-y+ier) that would otherwise pass. Two routines help maintain the hash lists used by spell. Both expect a set of words, one per line, from the standard input. Spellin com- bines the words from the standard input and the preexisting list file and places a new list on the standard output. If no list file is specified, the new list is created from scratch. Spellout looks up each word from the standard input and prints on the standard output those that are missing from (or present on, with option -d) the hashed list file. For example, to verify that hookey is not on the default spelling list, add it to your own private list, and then use it with spell, echo hookey | spellout /usr/dict/hlista echo hookey | spellin /usr/dict/hlista > myhlist spell -d myhlist huckfinn FILES
/usr/dict/hlist[ab] hashed spelling lists, American & British, default for -d /usr/dict/hstop hashed stop list, default for -s /dev/null history file, default for -h /tmp/spell.$$* temporary files /usr/libexec/spell SEE ALSO
deroff(1), sort(1), tee(1), sed(1) BUGS
The spelling list's coverage is uneven; new installations will probably wish to monitor the output for several months to gather local addi- tions. British spelling was done by an American. 7th Edition October 22, 1996 SPELL(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:44 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy