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What difference does it make using sed with/without whitespaces?
The Next CEO of Stack OverflowSubstituting the first occurrence of a pattern in a line, for all the lines in a file with sedWorking with columns - awk and sedHow to delete empty comments with sed?Using sed to remove string from list of files failsWhat is the point of using multiple exclamation marks in sed?Change a string with sedUsing sed to pad-right a number in a CSVWhy does 'sed q' work differently when reading from a pipe?sed: how to disable autoprinting via script file instead of using the -n switch?Why might sed not make any change to a file?
I am learning shell-scripting and for that I am using HackerRank. There is a question related to sed on the same site: 'Sed' command #1. First of all I tried,
sed 's/the/this/'
but in that sample test case failed. Then I tried
sed 's/the /this /'
and it worked. So, the question arises what difference did the whitespaces created? Am I missing something here?
sed whitespace
New contributor
add a comment |
I am learning shell-scripting and for that I am using HackerRank. There is a question related to sed on the same site: 'Sed' command #1. First of all I tried,
sed 's/the/this/'
but in that sample test case failed. Then I tried
sed 's/the /this /'
and it worked. So, the question arises what difference did the whitespaces created? Am I missing something here?
sed whitespace
New contributor
add a comment |
I am learning shell-scripting and for that I am using HackerRank. There is a question related to sed on the same site: 'Sed' command #1. First of all I tried,
sed 's/the/this/'
but in that sample test case failed. Then I tried
sed 's/the /this /'
and it worked. So, the question arises what difference did the whitespaces created? Am I missing something here?
sed whitespace
New contributor
I am learning shell-scripting and for that I am using HackerRank. There is a question related to sed on the same site: 'Sed' command #1. First of all I tried,
sed 's/the/this/'
but in that sample test case failed. Then I tried
sed 's/the /this /'
and it worked. So, the question arises what difference did the whitespaces created? Am I missing something here?
sed whitespace
sed whitespace
New contributor
New contributor
edited 3 hours ago
Jeff Schaller♦
44.4k1162143
44.4k1162143
New contributor
asked 3 hours ago
JHAJHA
273
273
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
The difference is whether there is a space after the
in the input text.
For instance:
With a sentence without a space, no replacement:
$ echo 'theman' | sed 's/the /this /'
theman
With a sentence with a space, works as expected:
$ echo 'the man' | sed 's/the /this /'
this man
With a sentence with another whitespace character,
no replacement will occur:
$ echo -e 'thetman' | sed 's/the /this /'
the man
New contributor
I missed that. I had to take "the" as a string. Not a substring.
– JHA
3 hours ago
add a comment |
It's a cheap and error-prone way of doing word matching.
Note that the
with a space after it does not match the word thereby
so matching with a space after the the
avoids matching the string at the start of words. However, it still does match bathe
(if followed by a space), and it does not match the
at the end of a line.
To match the word the
properly (or any other word), you should not use spaces around the word, as that would prevent you from matching it at the start or end of lines or if it's flanked by any other non-word character, such as any punctuation or tab character, for example.
Instead, use a zero-width word boundary pattern:
sed 's/<the>/this/g'
The <
and >
matches the boundaries before and after the word, i.e. the space between a word character and a non-word character. A word character is generally any character matching [[:alnum:]_]
(or [A-Za-z0-9_]
in the POSIX locale).
With GNU sed
, you could also use b
in place of <
and >
:
sed 's/btheb/this/g'
add a comment |
sed works with regular expressions.
Using sed 's/the /this /'
you just make the space after the
part of the matched pattern.
Using sed 's/the/this/'
you replace all occurrences of the
with this
no matter if a space exists after the
.
In the HackerRank exercise, the result is the same because to replace the with this is logical... you replace just a pro-noun which by default is followed by space (grammar rules).
You can see the difference if you try for example to capitalize the
in the word the theater
:
echo 'the theater' |sed 's/the /THE /g'
THE theater
#theater is ignored since the is not followed by space
echo 'the theater' |sed 's/the/THE/g'
THE THEater
#both the are capitalized.
Thank you for the answer. Appreciated :)
– JHA
3 hours ago
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
The difference is whether there is a space after the
in the input text.
For instance:
With a sentence without a space, no replacement:
$ echo 'theman' | sed 's/the /this /'
theman
With a sentence with a space, works as expected:
$ echo 'the man' | sed 's/the /this /'
this man
With a sentence with another whitespace character,
no replacement will occur:
$ echo -e 'thetman' | sed 's/the /this /'
the man
New contributor
I missed that. I had to take "the" as a string. Not a substring.
– JHA
3 hours ago
add a comment |
The difference is whether there is a space after the
in the input text.
For instance:
With a sentence without a space, no replacement:
$ echo 'theman' | sed 's/the /this /'
theman
With a sentence with a space, works as expected:
$ echo 'the man' | sed 's/the /this /'
this man
With a sentence with another whitespace character,
no replacement will occur:
$ echo -e 'thetman' | sed 's/the /this /'
the man
New contributor
I missed that. I had to take "the" as a string. Not a substring.
– JHA
3 hours ago
add a comment |
The difference is whether there is a space after the
in the input text.
For instance:
With a sentence without a space, no replacement:
$ echo 'theman' | sed 's/the /this /'
theman
With a sentence with a space, works as expected:
$ echo 'the man' | sed 's/the /this /'
this man
With a sentence with another whitespace character,
no replacement will occur:
$ echo -e 'thetman' | sed 's/the /this /'
the man
New contributor
The difference is whether there is a space after the
in the input text.
For instance:
With a sentence without a space, no replacement:
$ echo 'theman' | sed 's/the /this /'
theman
With a sentence with a space, works as expected:
$ echo 'the man' | sed 's/the /this /'
this man
With a sentence with another whitespace character,
no replacement will occur:
$ echo -e 'thetman' | sed 's/the /this /'
the man
New contributor
edited 2 hours ago
G-Man
13.6k93770
13.6k93770
New contributor
answered 3 hours ago
BDRBDR
613
613
New contributor
New contributor
I missed that. I had to take "the" as a string. Not a substring.
– JHA
3 hours ago
add a comment |
I missed that. I had to take "the" as a string. Not a substring.
– JHA
3 hours ago
I missed that. I had to take "the" as a string. Not a substring.
– JHA
3 hours ago
I missed that. I had to take "the" as a string. Not a substring.
– JHA
3 hours ago
add a comment |
It's a cheap and error-prone way of doing word matching.
Note that the
with a space after it does not match the word thereby
so matching with a space after the the
avoids matching the string at the start of words. However, it still does match bathe
(if followed by a space), and it does not match the
at the end of a line.
To match the word the
properly (or any other word), you should not use spaces around the word, as that would prevent you from matching it at the start or end of lines or if it's flanked by any other non-word character, such as any punctuation or tab character, for example.
Instead, use a zero-width word boundary pattern:
sed 's/<the>/this/g'
The <
and >
matches the boundaries before and after the word, i.e. the space between a word character and a non-word character. A word character is generally any character matching [[:alnum:]_]
(or [A-Za-z0-9_]
in the POSIX locale).
With GNU sed
, you could also use b
in place of <
and >
:
sed 's/btheb/this/g'
add a comment |
It's a cheap and error-prone way of doing word matching.
Note that the
with a space after it does not match the word thereby
so matching with a space after the the
avoids matching the string at the start of words. However, it still does match bathe
(if followed by a space), and it does not match the
at the end of a line.
To match the word the
properly (or any other word), you should not use spaces around the word, as that would prevent you from matching it at the start or end of lines or if it's flanked by any other non-word character, such as any punctuation or tab character, for example.
Instead, use a zero-width word boundary pattern:
sed 's/<the>/this/g'
The <
and >
matches the boundaries before and after the word, i.e. the space between a word character and a non-word character. A word character is generally any character matching [[:alnum:]_]
(or [A-Za-z0-9_]
in the POSIX locale).
With GNU sed
, you could also use b
in place of <
and >
:
sed 's/btheb/this/g'
add a comment |
It's a cheap and error-prone way of doing word matching.
Note that the
with a space after it does not match the word thereby
so matching with a space after the the
avoids matching the string at the start of words. However, it still does match bathe
(if followed by a space), and it does not match the
at the end of a line.
To match the word the
properly (or any other word), you should not use spaces around the word, as that would prevent you from matching it at the start or end of lines or if it's flanked by any other non-word character, such as any punctuation or tab character, for example.
Instead, use a zero-width word boundary pattern:
sed 's/<the>/this/g'
The <
and >
matches the boundaries before and after the word, i.e. the space between a word character and a non-word character. A word character is generally any character matching [[:alnum:]_]
(or [A-Za-z0-9_]
in the POSIX locale).
With GNU sed
, you could also use b
in place of <
and >
:
sed 's/btheb/this/g'
It's a cheap and error-prone way of doing word matching.
Note that the
with a space after it does not match the word thereby
so matching with a space after the the
avoids matching the string at the start of words. However, it still does match bathe
(if followed by a space), and it does not match the
at the end of a line.
To match the word the
properly (or any other word), you should not use spaces around the word, as that would prevent you from matching it at the start or end of lines or if it's flanked by any other non-word character, such as any punctuation or tab character, for example.
Instead, use a zero-width word boundary pattern:
sed 's/<the>/this/g'
The <
and >
matches the boundaries before and after the word, i.e. the space between a word character and a non-word character. A word character is generally any character matching [[:alnum:]_]
(or [A-Za-z0-9_]
in the POSIX locale).
With GNU sed
, you could also use b
in place of <
and >
:
sed 's/btheb/this/g'
edited 2 hours ago
answered 3 hours ago
Kusalananda♦Kusalananda
139k17259429
139k17259429
add a comment |
add a comment |
sed works with regular expressions.
Using sed 's/the /this /'
you just make the space after the
part of the matched pattern.
Using sed 's/the/this/'
you replace all occurrences of the
with this
no matter if a space exists after the
.
In the HackerRank exercise, the result is the same because to replace the with this is logical... you replace just a pro-noun which by default is followed by space (grammar rules).
You can see the difference if you try for example to capitalize the
in the word the theater
:
echo 'the theater' |sed 's/the /THE /g'
THE theater
#theater is ignored since the is not followed by space
echo 'the theater' |sed 's/the/THE/g'
THE THEater
#both the are capitalized.
Thank you for the answer. Appreciated :)
– JHA
3 hours ago
add a comment |
sed works with regular expressions.
Using sed 's/the /this /'
you just make the space after the
part of the matched pattern.
Using sed 's/the/this/'
you replace all occurrences of the
with this
no matter if a space exists after the
.
In the HackerRank exercise, the result is the same because to replace the with this is logical... you replace just a pro-noun which by default is followed by space (grammar rules).
You can see the difference if you try for example to capitalize the
in the word the theater
:
echo 'the theater' |sed 's/the /THE /g'
THE theater
#theater is ignored since the is not followed by space
echo 'the theater' |sed 's/the/THE/g'
THE THEater
#both the are capitalized.
Thank you for the answer. Appreciated :)
– JHA
3 hours ago
add a comment |
sed works with regular expressions.
Using sed 's/the /this /'
you just make the space after the
part of the matched pattern.
Using sed 's/the/this/'
you replace all occurrences of the
with this
no matter if a space exists after the
.
In the HackerRank exercise, the result is the same because to replace the with this is logical... you replace just a pro-noun which by default is followed by space (grammar rules).
You can see the difference if you try for example to capitalize the
in the word the theater
:
echo 'the theater' |sed 's/the /THE /g'
THE theater
#theater is ignored since the is not followed by space
echo 'the theater' |sed 's/the/THE/g'
THE THEater
#both the are capitalized.
sed works with regular expressions.
Using sed 's/the /this /'
you just make the space after the
part of the matched pattern.
Using sed 's/the/this/'
you replace all occurrences of the
with this
no matter if a space exists after the
.
In the HackerRank exercise, the result is the same because to replace the with this is logical... you replace just a pro-noun which by default is followed by space (grammar rules).
You can see the difference if you try for example to capitalize the
in the word the theater
:
echo 'the theater' |sed 's/the /THE /g'
THE theater
#theater is ignored since the is not followed by space
echo 'the theater' |sed 's/the/THE/g'
THE THEater
#both the are capitalized.
edited 3 hours ago
JHA
273
273
answered 3 hours ago
George VasiliouGeorge Vasiliou
5,77531030
5,77531030
Thank you for the answer. Appreciated :)
– JHA
3 hours ago
add a comment |
Thank you for the answer. Appreciated :)
– JHA
3 hours ago
Thank you for the answer. Appreciated :)
– JHA
3 hours ago
Thank you for the answer. Appreciated :)
– JHA
3 hours ago
add a comment |
JHA is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
JHA is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
JHA is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
JHA is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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