Having $string2 defined as the complete output makes no sense (to me) as you could simply print it without any substitution. I guess this is more appropriate:
sed is a StreamEditor and so needs a stream as input to work on. Having no file or redirected input won't make it work.
I'm trying to do a global search and replace in vi. I am trying to replace a string, call it "BOB" with a carriage return and can't seem to find a reference to it.
Command syntax s%/BOB/???/g
What would I substitute the "???" with? (7 Replies)
Is there any way we can achieve search & replace with awk?
I could achieve the same with sed in following way -
sed 's/A/B/g' file1 > file2
But the same regex if I try with using awk following way,
awk 's/A/B/g' file1 > file2
it gives me Syntax error. I strongly believe I am... (1 Reply)
Can I use search & replace in any variable?
Suppose I have one variable named var1 which holds value "abcabc" I need to search 'a' in var1 and want to replace with 'x' like 'xbcxbc'. Is it possible? Can you provide me an example?
Malay (3 Replies)
Hey, I want to have a C program which, for an existing file supplied by the command line argument (E.g. File1.txt) replaces all the occurrences of the words:
"We” or “we” by “I”
“a” by “the”
“A” by “The”.
Then print the replaced file. All other characters of the file are to be left... (1 Reply)
I have a file that has some accent characters in it when viewed in some text editors, but when viewed in vi they come in as ~R and ~U. I need to make a script to remove these characters from the file, but have been unsuccessful. I am not sure how sed or awk, or something similar is viewing them,... (8 Replies)
Hi ,
I ahve a text file which has several instances of the text such as
run_time: 09:30
I need to add double quotes before and after the time value
i.e: run_time: "09:30"
Any suggestions on how to go about the same (4 Replies)
Hi I'm trying to replace a string in the files ending with *.txt
Unable to get the sed to do the job. any help would be appreciated :)
I'm on SunOS
#!/bin/bash
startdirectory={$HOME}/pp_test
searchterm="change"
replaceterm="CHANGE"
echo $searchterm
echo $replaceterm
for file in... (4 Replies)
Hi all,
I have one question that hopefully isn't too complicated for the more advanced users here. In one of the Solaris KSH scripts I'm working on, is it possible to script the following:
- If there "is" an empty blank line "at the end" of /tmp/text.txt, then remove only that one empty... (3 Replies)
Hi,
My problem is that I have to search a changing pattern and replace it with the wild card char "*"
i/p: 99_*_YYYYMMDD_SRC.txt.tar.gz
o/p: 99_*_*_SRC.txt.tar.gz
The problem is that YYYYMMDD pattern is not static. It could be YYYYMMDDHHMI or could be YYYYMMDDHHMISS.
Can... (10 Replies)
Hi Gurus,
I have two files. I want to read sessoin_name from the file1 and replace $Param4 & $Param5 in file2 with connection_name in specified in file1.
The file1 will have data in following format
File 1
session_name,connection_name
s_abcd,Listener_2
s_def,Listener_1
source file... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: r_t_1601
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT BSD
tr
TR(1) General Commands Manual TR(1)NAME
tr - translate characters
SYNOPSIS
tr [ -cds ] [ string1 [ string2 ] ]
DESCRIPTION
Tr copies the standard input to the standard output with substitution or deletion of selected characters. Input characters found in
string1 are mapped into the corresponding characters of string2. When string2 is short it is padded to the length of string1 by duplicat-
ing its last character. Any combination of the options -cds may be used: -c complements the set of characters in string1 with respect to
the universe of characters whose ASCII codes are 01 through 0377 octal; -d deletes all input characters in string1; -s squeezes all strings
of repeated output characters that are in string2 to single characters.
In either string the notation a-b means a range of characters from a to b in increasing ASCII order. The character `' followed by 1, 2 or
3 octal digits stands for the character whose ASCII code is given by those digits. A `' followed by any other character stands for that
character.
The following example creates a list of all the words in `file1' one per line in `file2', where a word is taken to be a maximal string of
alphabetics. The second string is quoted to protect `' from the Shell. 012 is the ASCII code for newline.
tr -cs A-Za-z '