SED eng

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SED - sed is a stream editor. The major use of stream editor is to perform basic text transformations on an input stream (a file or input from a pipeline). While in some ways similar to an editor which permits scripted edits (such as ed), sed works by making only one pass over the input(s), and is consequently more efficient. But it is sed’s ability to filter text in a pipeline which particularly distinguishes it from other types of editors[1]. it basically means that all the editing are made by calling the command and sed will execute the directions automatically. sed is a very powerful and fast way to transform text.

Introduction

sed stream editor is a text editor that performs editing operations on information coming from standard input or a file. Sed reads and edits text line-by-line and in a non-interactive way.[2]

Main Operation and usage

sed is a line-oriented text processing utility: it reads text, line by line, from an input stream or file, into an internal buffer called the pattern space. Each line read starts a cycle. To the pattern space, sed applies one or more operations which have been specified via a sed script. sed implements a programming language with about 25 commands that specify the operations on the text. For each input line, after running the script sed ordinarily outputs the pattern space (the line as modified by the script) and begins the cycle again with the next line. Other end-of-script behaviors are available through sed options and script commands, e.g. d to delete the pattern space, q to quit, N to add the next line to the pattern space immediately, and so on. Thus a sed script corresponds to the body of a loop that iterates through the lines of a stream, where the loop itself and the loop variable (the current line number) are implicit and maintained by sed.

The sed script can either be specified on the command line (-e option) or read from a separate file (-f option). Commands in the sed script may take an optional address, in terms of line numbers or regular expressions. The address determines when the command is run. For example, 2d would only run the d (delete) command on the second input line (printing all lines but the second), while /^ /d would delete all lines beginning with a space.[3] In general, sed operates on a stream of text that it reads from either standard input or from a file.which means that all the editing are made by calling the command and sed will execute the directions automatically. Have it in mind that sed outputs everything to standard out by default. which means that, unless redirected, sed print its output to the screen instead of saving it in a file.

Basic Usage

     sed [options] commands [file-to-edit]