This sed works for me to remove all of the 'special' characters including both open/close square braces and the single quote, all in a single sed substitute statement:
By placing the close square bracket immediately following the open character class, it is not interpreted as the end of the character class.
Using the '\'' construct you can "insert" a single quote into the class.
I don't know if I picked up all of the specials that you wish to remove, but you should be able to add what ever I missed.
I see an escaped t in your sed command. That tells me you're using a sed that supports more than mine does (e.g., symbols for tabs, newlines, etc. plus octal and hex, if it's the GNU version).
My shell with my sed won't let me escape a single quote if I'm also using single quotes to enclose my sed command sequence.
Hi there,
I'm pretty new to UNIX and have tried trawling through this forum to find an answer to what I want to try to do, which I'm sure is very simple but I don't know how to do it.
What I have a a folder that contains multiple files that I have copied from Windows and I want to remove the... (5 Replies)
How do I remove non-printable characters from all txt files and output the results to one file?
I've tried the following:
tr -cd '\n' < *.txt > out.txt
and it gives ambiguous redirect error.
How can I get it to operate on all txt files in the current directory and append the output to... (1 Reply)
I'm using a script with a lot of SED commands, in conjunction with grep, cut, etc. I've come up against a wall with a particular road block:
I output a file from an SVN registry that gives me a list of files. The list consists of a variable number of lines that contain a path/file. The paths... (4 Replies)
I have a problem mounting images because of the spaces in the filenames. Does anyone know how to rename files by removing the spaces with the find command?
find Desktop/$dir -name "*.dmg" -print -exec ??? (4 Replies)
I have the following files in the same directory but if you look at the od
output you can see one of the files has and "\n" as part of the file
name.
Is there a way I can only remove the file with the "\n" as part of the
file name without affecting the other file.
I was thinking about... (4 Replies)
I'm trying to move a large folder to an external drive but some files have these weird chars that the external drive won't accept.
Does anyone know any command of any bash script that will look through a given folder and remove any weird chars? (4 Replies)
Dear community,
maybe I'm asking the moon :rolleyes:, but I'm scratching my head to find a solution for it. :wall:
I have a file called query.out (coming from Oracle query), the file is like this:
ADDR TOTAL
-------------------- ----------
TGROUPAGGR... (16 Replies)
Running SunOs 5.6. Solaris.
I've been able to remove all special characters from a fixed length file which appear in the first column but as a result all subsequent columns have shifted to the left by the amount of characters deleted.
It is a space separated file. Line 1 in input file is... (6 Replies)
Hi all,
I'm using iconv command to change files encoding to UTF-8
If my input file has chars as those are removed creating the file without those special chars.
I tried using iconv -c, but there is still the removal.
Is there a way to keep those special chars changing just the... (6 Replies)
Hi Team,
I have a file a1.txt with data as follows.
dfjakjf...asdfkasj</EnableQuotedIDs><SQL><SelectStatement modified='1' type='string'><!
The delimiter string: <SelectStatement modified='1' type='string'><!
dlm="<SelectStatement modified='1' type='string'><!
The above command is... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: kmanivan82
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT LINUX
shtool-subst
SHTOOL-SUBST.TMP(1) GNU Portable Shell Tool SHTOOL-SUBST.TMP(1)NAME
shtool-subst - GNU shtool sed(1) substitution operations
SYNOPSIS
shtool subst [-v|--verbose] [-t|--trace] [-n|--nop] [-w|--warning] [-q|--quiet] [-s|--stealth] [-i|--interactive] [-b|--backup ext]
[-e|--exec cmd] [-f|--file cmd-file] [file] [file ...]
DESCRIPTION
This command applies one or more sed(1) substitution operations to stdin or any number of files.
OPTIONS
The following command line options are available.
-v, --verbose
Display some processing information.
-t, --trace
Enable the output of the essential shell commands which are executed.
-n, --nop
No operation mode. Actual execution of the essential shell commands which would be executed is suppressed.
-w, --warning
Show warning on substitution operation resulting in no content change on every file. The default is to show a warning on substitution
operations resulted in no content change on all files.
-q, --quiet
Suppress warning on substitution operation resulting in no content change.
-s, --stealth
Stealth operation. Preserve timestamp on file.
-i, --interactive
Enter interactive mode where the user has to approve each operation.
-b, --backup ext
Preserve backup of original file using file name extension ext. Default is to overwrite the original file.
-e, --exec cmd
Specify sed(1) command directly.
-f, --file cmd-file
Read sed(1) command from file.
EXAMPLE
# shell script
shtool subst -i -e 's;(c) ([0-9]*)-2000;(c) 1-2001;' *.[ch]
# RPM spec-file
%install
shtool subst -v -n
-e 's;^(prefix=).*;1 $RPM_BUILD_ROOT%{_prefix};g'
-e 's;^(sysconfdir=).*;1 $RPM_BUILD_ROOT%{_prefix}/etc;g'
`find . -name Makefile -print`
make install
HISTORY
The GNU shtool subst command was originally written by Ralf S. Engelschall <rse@engelschall.com> in 2001 for GNU shtool. It was prompted
by the need to have a uniform and convenient patching frontend to sed(1) operations in the OpenPKG package specifications.
SEE ALSO shtool(1), sed(1).
18-Jul-2008 shtool 2.0.8 SHTOOL-SUBST.TMP(1)