start page | rating of books | rating of authors | reviews | copyrights

Linux in a NutshellLinux in a NutshellSearch this book

Chapter 12. The sed Editor

Contents:

Command-Line Syntax
Syntax of sed Commands
Group Summary of sed Commands
Alphabetical Summary of sed Commands

sed is a noninteractive (stream-oriented) editor that interprets and performs the actions in a script. sed is said to be stream-oriented because, as with many Unix programs, input flows through the program and is directed to standard output. For example, sort is stream-oriented; vi is not. sed's input typically comes from a file but can be directed from the keyboard. Output goes to the screen by default but can be captured in a file instead.

Typical uses of sed include:

sed operates as follows:

For more information on sed, see sed & awk (O'Reilly).

12.1. Command-Line Syntax

The syntax for invoking sed has two forms:

sed [options] 'command' file(s)
sed [options] -f scriptfile file(s)

The first form allows you to specify an editing command, surrounded by single quotes, on the command line. The second form allows you to specify a scriptfile, which is a file containing sed commands. If no files are specified, sed reads from standard input.

The following options are recognized:

-e cmd, --expression=cmd
Next argument is an editing command; not needed unless specifying two or more editing commands.

-f scriptfile, --file=scriptfile
Next argument is a file containing editing commands.

-n, --silent, --quiet
Suppress the default output; sed displays only those lines specified with the p command or with the p flag of the s command.

-V, --version
Display version number.

-h, --help
Display brief help message with command-line options.



Library Navigation Links

Copyright © 2003 O'Reilly & Associates. All rights reserved.