4

Our designers provide HTML for our email marketing and often, I'll see a ^C character in it when viewed in vi. These are invisible in textmate.

It looks something like this

<td width="340" align="center">Odyssey T-shirt / ^C<br>&pound;000</td>

I want to write a sed script which finds and replaces these, but how can I search for this?

1
  • Do you have a file that you can upload for us to check... I guess the charcode is somewhere between &#9786; and &#9835; but I'm not 100% sure.
    – user238801
    Dec 16, 2013 at 19:05

1 Answer 1

1

You can replace all occurences in the file using:

cat YOURFILE.html | sed 's/^C/YOURSTRING/g'

To type in ^C hit Ctrl-V and then Ctrl-C. Replace YOURSTRING with the string you want to replace and YOURFILE with the filename.

1
  • Worked like a charm! Thank you :) I didn't know about the Ctrl-V trick
    – Samuurai
    Dec 16, 2013 at 20:58

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.