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I want to remove the space between two distinct chars separated by space.

For example

In String "hello world doddy", I want the space between hello & world be removed (but preserve the space between world and doddy, since d d pattern needs to be preserved).

I tried:

$ echo "hello world doddy" | sed 's/\(.\) \([^\1]\)/\1\2/g'

But ended up with

helloworlddoddy

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  • Backreferences don’t expand in square brackets. This is much more easily solved in Perl where you can have lookaheads etc as needed.
    – tchrist
    Aug 29, 2011 at 12:48

2 Answers 2

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Prep the string by first doubling any space that is between two identical characters. The intervening space shifts from being between two identical characters to between one of the characters and a space, so all spaces can be checked the same way.

echo "hello world doddy" | sed -e 's/\(.\) \1/\1  \1/g' -e 's/\(.\) \(.\)/\1\2/g'
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  • yes, this is very cool! I ended up using @tripleee 's suggestion of using sentinel values - but this is cool. thanks! Aug 29, 2011 at 17:41
  • @potong With the extensions in GNU sed, it could be shortened as you suggest. I'll leave the more general form in the answer, but it's a nice tip for GNU sed users. Dec 14, 2011 at 18:24
  • Perhaps s/\([^ ]\) /\1/g would be suffice?
    – potong
    Dec 14, 2011 at 19:33
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You cannot use a backref inside a character class.

I would approach this by using a sentinel for those cases where the space should be preserved, like so:

echo "hello world doddy" |
sed 's/\([^ ]\) \1/\1<<>>\1/g;s/\([^ ]\) \([^ ]\)/\1\2/g;s/<<>>/ /g'

Edit: changed . to [^ ] to avoid manging double spaces, just to be more precise. Thanks for the suggestion.

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  • You beat me to it. I'll vote you up when I get more votes. I'd replace . with [^ ] to make sure the bracketing characters aren't spaces.
    – Tom Zych
    Aug 29, 2011 at 10:46

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