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Using different delimiters in sed commands and range addresses


I am using sed in a shell script to edit filesystem path names. Suppose I want to replace

/foo/bar

with

/baz/qux

However, sed's s/// command uses the forward slash / as the delimiter. If I do that, I see an error message emitted, like:

▶ sed 's//foo/bar//baz/qux//' FILE
sed: 1: "s//foo/bar//baz/qux//": bad flag in substitute command: 'b'

Similarly, sometimes I want to select line ranges, such as the lines between a pattern foo/bar and baz/qux. Again, I can't do this:

▶ sed '/foo/bar/,/baz/qux/d' FILE
sed: 1: "/foo/bar/,/baz/qux/d": undefined label 'ar/,/baz/qux/d'

What can I do?


Solution

  • You can use an alternative regex delimiter as a search pattern by backslashing it:

    sed '\,some/path,d'
    

    And just use it as is for the s command:

    sed 's,some/path,other/path,'
    

    You probably want to protect other metacharacters, though; this is a good place to use Perl and quotemeta, or equivalents in other scripting languages.

    From man sed:

    /regexp/
    Match lines matching the regular expression regexp.

    \cregexpc
    Match lines matching the regular expression regexp. The c may be any character other than backslash or newline.

    s/regular expression/replacement/flags
    Substitute the replacement string for the first instance of the regular expression in the pattern space. Any character other than backslash or newline can be used instead of a slash to delimit the RE and the replacement. Within the RE and the replacement, the RE delimiter itself can be used as a literal character if it is preceded by a backslash.