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Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Replace Pattern with another that has Special Characters Post 303033344 by RudiC on Wednesday 3rd of April 2019 04:52:58 PM
Old 04-03-2019
You are quite free in selecting delimiters for sed's s command:
info sed:
Quote:
The '/' characters may be uniformly replaced by any other single character within any given 's' command. The '/' character (or whatever other character is used in its stead) can appear in the REGEXP or REPLACEMENT only if it is preceded by a '\' character.
so the / don't need to be escaped any more.



But, as apmcd47 already pointed out, you need to make sure that the selected delimiter doesn't show up explicitly in your regex nor replacement, nor does any character with a special meaning in regexes, like the ones you mentioned.
For single special chars, you might fall back to your shell's "Parameter Expansion / Pattern substitution" as alluded to by apmcd47, so your command would look like

Code:
sed "s^<urn:sourceKey>${old_pkey//[/\\[}</urn:sourceKey>^<urn:sourceKey>${new_pkey//[/\\[}</urn:sourceKey>^g" delete_request.txt

If you expect more than one special char, it might be easier to create a small sed command on the fly, using another sed invocation.
 

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copt(1) 							z88 Development Kit							   copt(1)

NAME
copt - peephole optimizer SYSNOPIS
copt file ... DESCRIPTION
copt is a general-purpose peephole optimizer. It reads code from its standard input and writes an improved version to its standard output. copy reads the named files for its optimizations, which are encoded as follows: <pattern for input line 1> <pattern for input line 2> ... <pattern for input line n> = <pattern for output line 1> <pattern for output line 2> ... <pattern for output line m> <blank line> Pattern matching uses literal string comparison, with one exception: ``%%'' matches the ``%'' character, and ``%'' followed by a digit matches everything up to the next occurrence of the next pattern character, though all occurrences of %n must denote the same string. For example, the pattern ``%1=%1.'' matches exactly those strings that begin with a string X, followed by a ``='' (the first), followed by a second occurrence of X, followed by a period. In this way, the input/output pattern mov $%1,r%2 mov *r%2,r%2 = mov %1,r%2 commands copt to replace runs like mov $_a,r3 mov *r3,r3 with mov _a,r3 Note that a tab or newline can terminate a %n variable. copt compares each run of input patterns with the current input instruction and its predecessors. If no match is found, it advances to the next input instruction and tries again. Otherwise, it replaces the input instructions with the corresponding output patterns, pattern vari- ables instantiated,and resumes its search with the first instruction of the replacement. copt matches input patterns in reverse order to cascade optimizations without backing up. BUGS
Errors in optimization files are always possible. SEE ALSO
z88dk(1), z88dk-zcc(1), z88dk-z80asm(1), z88dk-appmake(1), z88dk-copt(1). AUTHOR
z88dk was written by Dominic Morris <dom@z88dk.org>, and others. 01 December 2009 copt(1)
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