Single/Multiple Line with Special characters - Find & Replace in Unix Script
Hi,
I am creating a script to do a find and replace single/multiple lines in a file with any number of lines.
I have written a logic in a script that reads a reference file say "findrep" and populates two variables $FIND and $REPLACE
print $FIND gives
Hi How r $u
Rahul()
Note: $FIND can contain one or multiple lines along with special characters
print $REPLACE gives
#Hi How r $u
#Rahul()
i am $fine
thanks()
Note: $REPLACE can contain one or multiple lines along with special characters
Now, I want to replace $FIND with $REPLACE in "introduction.sh". Can anyone help me in achieving this? i have gone through lot of threads and forums but no success.
I have tried below command but it did not work
Also tried below command
Also, tried awk
But this gave an error as below
awk: syntax error near line 1
awk: illegal statement near line 1
Last edited by r_sarnayak; 06-02-2010 at 05:56 AM..
Reason: adding code tags
Hi,
Please find the Question Summary below-
In our email template document(.txt) bullets and Apostrophe are getting replaced by the string "£" in our Live environment.We are using sun solaris 8 in live.
Can anybody let me know why this happens and how to prevent this .
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Can I get some help on this please, I have looked at the many post with similar questions and have tried the solutions and they are not working for my scenario which is:
I have a text file (myfile) that contains
b_log=$g_log/FILENAME.log
echo "Begin processing file FILENAME " >> $b_log
... (4 Replies)
HI All
I need a shell script ehich removes all special characters from file and converts the file to UTF-* format
Specail characters to be removed must be configurable.
strIllegal = @"?/><,:;""'{|\\+=-)(*&^%$#@!~`";
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I have 100 files, where i want to search a set of strings and make the replacement by other strings
In the first case I want to include a parameter in the name of a file
LOG_DCT = $ LOG_DIR/DCT_GERAL_"$DATAINI".log
replace to : LOG_DCT = $ LOG_DIR / DCT_GERAL_ $ 1_ "$ DATAINI". log
I did... (1 Reply)
find . -type f -name "*.sql" -print|xargs perl -i -pe 's/pattern/replaced/g'
this is simple logic to find and replace in multiple files & folders
Hope this helps.
Thanks
Zaheer (0 Replies)
Dear all
I need a script for multiple find and replace in a single file.
For example input file is -
qwe wer ert rty tyu
asd sdf dgf dfg fgh
qwe wer det rtyyui
jhkj ert asd asd dfgd
now
qwe should be replace with aaaaaa
asd should be replace with bbbbbbbb
rty should be replace... (6 Replies)
Hi, I wish to replace a new line with br (html) but it doesn't seem to work
message=$(echo ${FORM_message} | tr '\r' '<br \/>' )
what it gives me seems to be ... b...?
I am also having problem escaping hash sign in cut command:
list=$(echo "$line" | cut -d'\#;\#' -f1) ;
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Hi Gurus,
I need to cut single record in the file(asdf) to multile records based on the number of bytes..(44 characters). So every record will have 44 characters. All the records should be in the same file..to each of these lines I need to add the folder(<date>) name.
I have a dir. in which... (20 Replies)
Hey guys. I know pratically 0 about Linux, so could anyone please give me instructions on how to accomplish this ?
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Hi,
following Perl code i used for finding multiple strings and replace with single string.
code:
#!/usr/bin/perl
my @files = <*.txt>;
foreach $fileName (@files) {
print "$fileName\n";
my $searchStr = ',rdata\)' | ',,rdata\)' | ', ,rdata\)';
my $replaceStr =... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: chettyravi
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
osascript
OSASCRIPT(1) BSD General Commands Manual OSASCRIPT(1)NAME
osascript -- execute OSA scripts (AppleScript, JavaScript, etc.)
SYNOPSIS
osascript [-l language] [-i] [-s flags] [-e statement | programfile] [argument ...]
DESCRIPTION
osascript executes the given OSA script, which may be plain text or a compiled script (.scpt) created by Script Editor or osacompile(1). By
default, osascript treats plain text as AppleScript, but you can change this using the -l option. To get a list of the OSA languages
installed on your system, use osalang(1).
osascript will look for the script in one of the following three places:
1. Specified line by line using -e switches on the command line.
2. Contained in the file specified by the first filename on the command line. This file may be plain text or a compiled script.
3. Passed in using standard input. This works only if there are no filename arguments; to pass arguments to a STDIN-read script, you must
explicitly specify ``-'' for the script name.
Any arguments following the script will be passed as a list of strings to the direct parameter of the ``run'' handler. For example, in
AppleScript:
a.scpt:
on run argv
return "hello, " & item 1 of argv & "."
end run
% osascript a.scpt world
hello, world.
The options are as follows:
-e statement
Enter one line of a script. If -e is given, osascript will not look for a filename in the argument list. Multiple -e options may be
given to build up a multi-line script. Because most scripts use characters that are special to many shell programs (for example,
AppleScript uses single and double quote marks, ``('', ``)'', and ``*''), the statement will have to be correctly quoted and escaped to
get it past the shell intact.
-i Interactive mode: osascript will prompt for one line at a time, and print the result, if applicable, after each line. Any script sup-
plied as a command argument using -e or programfile will be loaded, but not executed, before starting the interactive prompt.
-l language
Override the language for any plain text files. Normally, plain text files are compiled as AppleScript.
-s flags
Modify the output style. The flags argument is a string consisting of any of the modifier characters e, h, o, and s. Multiple modi-
fiers can be concatenated in the same string, and multiple -s options can be specified. The modifiers come in exclusive pairs; if con-
flicting modifiers are specified, the last one takes precedence. The meanings of the modifier characters are as follows:
h Print values in human-readable form (default).
s Print values in recompilable source form.
osascript normally prints its results in human-readable form: strings do not have quotes around them, characters are not escaped,
braces for lists and records are omitted, etc. This is generally more useful, but can introduce ambiguities. For example, the
lists '{"foo", "bar"}' and '{{"foo", {"bar"}}}' would both be displayed as 'foo, bar'. To see the results in an unambiguous form
that could be recompiled into the same value, use the s modifier.
e Print script errors to stderr (default).
o Print script errors to stdout.
osascript normally prints script errors to stderr, so downstream clients only see valid results. When running automated tests, how-
ever, using the o modifier lets you distinguish script errors, which you care about matching, from other diagnostic output, which
you don't.
SEE ALSO osacompile(1), osalang(1), AppleScript Language Guide
HISTORY
osascript in Mac OS X 10.0 would translate '
' characters in the output to '
' and provided c and r modifiers for the -s option to change
this. osascript now always leaves the output alone; pipe through tr(1) if necessary.
Prior to Mac OS X 10.4, osascript did not allow passing arguments to the script.
Mac OS X April 24, 2014 Mac OS X