Sed Regular Expressions: Difference between revisions
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$ # unescaped signifies end of line | $ # unescaped signifies end of line | ||
! | ! | ||
[ | |||
] | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
Revision as of 18:00, 25 February 2017
Internal
Special Characters (need to be escaped in regular expressions)
/ " $ # unescaped signifies end of line ! [ ]
Non-Special Characters (do not need to be escaped in regular expressions)
< > ( ) ! -
Grouping
Use \( and \) for grouping. Parentheses must be escaped to be interpreted as grouping separator.
Examples
Match everything except space:
[^ ]*
.*
seems to work too.
Words (digits, alpha, _):
sed -e 's/[0-9a-zA-Z_]*/THIS_WAS_A_WORD/g'
Blank spaces (spaces, tabs, newlines): \s does not seem to work.