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Unix Search and Replace

To Search and Replace from the Command Line

Use "sed", the stream editor. You can use | (pipe) to send standard streams (STDIN and STDOUT specifically) through sed and alter them on the fly. To edit files directly, use the -i (in place) parameter.

sed -i "" -e 's/SEARCH/REPLACE/g' FILE

Where:
SEARCH is what to search for.
REPLACE is what to replace it with.
FILE is the path to the file to be processed.
s indicates the search terms.
g sets search to global (all instances on each line, not just the first).
-i specifies search the file "in place", otherwise uses standard input and output.
-e precedes each search specification; multiple can be used (see below).

Note 1: "" indicates don't add anything to the filename of the output file (just replace the existing file). This seems to be different in different shells, so YMMV.

Note 2: Any character (except "\" and "\n") can be used as the separator ("/" in the example above). Alternatively, use the escape character ("\") to escape "/" in the search or replace strings.

Note 3: the search string can be a regular expression.

Multiple Search and Replace

Use multiple search and replace string, each preceded by "-e":
sed -i "" -e 's/SEARCH1/REPLACE1/g' -e 's/SEARCH2/REPLACE2/g' FILE

Case Insensitive Search

Use the "I" option at the end of the strings:
sed -i "" -e 's/SEARCH/REPLACE/gI' FILE



My latest blog post: Manufactured Outrage: We might be beginning to win some battles, but the war is far from over. (posted 2024-12-17). My latest podcast: OJB's Podcast 2024-12-04 Avoid Microsoft.
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