This is what I want to do:
If I encounter a pattern like
someVarX: val1
I want to insert
someVarY: val2
on the next line
...BUT HERE IS THE CATCH:
someVarX: val1 can have a number preceding blank spaces (indentation) counting anywhere between 0 and N and I also want to repeat that exact indentatation on the next line. So if someVarX: val1 has 3 preceding blank spaces, then I also want someVarY: val2 to have 3 preceding blank spaces.
This is what I tried:
s/\n( +)someVarX: val1/\n${1}someVarX: val1\n${1}someVarY: val2/
hoping that ${1} would insert the capture group from the search pattern into the replace string but got:
sed: command garbled: ...
The OS os SunOS 5.10. I couldn't run sed --version
, it told me the option --version was illegal.
Any idea?
\1
. Also, in your match pattern, is the '\n` meant to a new-line? This won't work unless you are operating on the hold buffer. For what you appear to be attempting (sample input and required output in your question makes this sort of thing so much easier to help with, now we have to assume we know how you want this to work).\n
is the new line. how else i can instruct it to insert a new line?uname
andsed --version
. Some seds allow\n
in the replacement part. My objection to\n
is in the first part, the pattern matching ins/\n( +) someVar...
. 2. Sed relies on\n
to separate each line for processing, it won't be at the being of the line. The only place an\n
will work on the pattern matching side is when you have saved a line into the hold buffer.... so ... 3. Are you showing us your complete sed script? Good luck.