In-place edits with sed on OS X

孤街醉人 提交于 2019-11-26 14:58:49
whittle

You can use the -i flag correctly by providing it with a suffix to add to the backed-up file. Extending your example:

sed -i.bu 's/oldword/newword/' file1.txt

Will give you two files: one with the name file1.txt that contains the substitution, and one with the name file1.txt.bu that has the original content.

Mildly dangerous

If you want to destructively overwrite the original file, use something like:

sed -i '' 's/oldword/newword/' file1.txt
      ^ note the space

Because of the way the line gets parsed, a space is required between the option flag and its argument because the argument is zero-length.

Other than possibly trashing your original, I’m not aware of any further dangers of tricking sed this way. It should be noted, however, that if this invocation of sed is part of a script, The Unix Way™ would (IMHO) be to use sed non-destructively, test that it exited cleanly, and only then remove the extraneous file.

I've similar problem with MacOS

sed -i '' 's/oldword/newword/' file1.txt

doesn't works, but

sed -i"any_symbol" 's/oldword/newword/' file1.txt

works well.

Vincent Lal

You can use:

sed -i -e 's/<string-to-find>/<string-to-replace>/' <your-file-path>

Example:

sed -i -e 's/Hello/Bye/' file.txt

This works flawless in Mac.

You can use -i'' (--in-place) for sed as already suggested. See: The -i in-place argument, however note that -i option is non-standard FreeBSD extensions and may not be available on other operating systems. Secondly sed is a Stream EDitor, not a file editor.


Alternative way is to use built-in substitution in Vim Ex mode, like:

$ ex +%s/foo/bar/g -scwq file.txt

and for multiple-files:

$ ex +'bufdo!%s/foo/bar/g' -scxa *.*

To edit all files recursively you can use **/*.* if shell supports that (enable by shopt -s globstar).


Another way is to use gawk and its new "inplace" extension such as:

$ gawk -i inplace '{ gsub(/foo/, "bar") }; { print }' file1
jazzed
sed -i -- "s/https/http/g" file.txt

This creates backup files. E.g. sed -i -e 's/hello/hello world/' testfile for me, creates a backup file, testfile-e, in the same dir.

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