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I'm looking for a quick way to add a "$" character at the beginning of every line after every blank line from a file. Example : input file

text1  

text2    
text3  

text4  
text5 

Example output file :

text1  

$text2    
text3  

$text4  
text5

5 Answers 5

3

Assuming that lines is a list of your lines:

fixit = False
for line in lines:
    if fixit and line.strip():
        line = "$" + line
    fixit = (line.strip() == "")
    print line

The fixit = (line.strip() == "") is the test that checks whether the current line is blank or not [the .strip methods remove all blank characters (" ", "\n",...) at the beginning and end of your line].

The if fixit and line.strip() avoids printing a $ at the beginning of the second empty line if you have two empty lines in a row.

0
2
awk '{print}; ""~$0 {getline; print "$" $0}' input_file

gives

text1

$text2
text3

$text4
text5

UPDATE:
Adapted to handle multiple consecutive blanks:

awk '""~$0 {flag=1; print; next}; flag {printf "$"; flag=0} 1'
0
2

Try

sed 'N;s/^\s*\n/&$/;P;D' inputfile
2

print open("input.txt").read().replace('\n\n', '\n\n$')

1

Another way with GNU sed:

sed -rn '1 h; 1!H; $ {x; s/(\n\n)(.)/\1$\2/g; p}' infile

And with comments:

sed -rn '
  1h                     # First collect all input 
  1!H                    # in the hold space 
  $ {
    x                    # Swap hold space and pattern space
    s/(\n\n)(.)/\1$\2/g  # Globally insert $ after empty lines
    p                    # Print the result
  }'

As noted by potong in the comments, this solution loads all of the input into memory which might be problematic depending on the size of the input.

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  • The back references (which BTW produces the wrong answer in your first solution) are not needed as & may be used instead. This solution slurps the entire file into memory, so may cause problems if the file(s) are large. That being said perhaps sed '1h;1!H;$!d;x;s/\n\n/&$/g' file might be clearer.
    – potong
    Sep 2, 2012 at 20:28
  • Ah forgot to update the compact solution [Fixed]. I used the back-references so it also supports consecutive empty lines. Your comment about memory usage is important, I'll add it to the answer.
    – Thor
    Sep 2, 2012 at 20:35

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