I want to escape some special chars inside a string automatically. I thought of echoing that string and pipe it through some seds. This doesn't seem to work inside of backticks. So why does

echo "foo[bar]" | sed 's/\[/\\[/g'

return

foo\[bar]

but

FOO=`echo "foo[bar]" | sed 's/\[/\\[/g'` && echo $FOO

just returns

foo[bar]

?

In contrast to sed, tr works perfectly inside of backticks:

FOO=`echo "foo[bar]" | tr '[' '-' ` && echo $FOO

returns

foo-bar]
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3 Answers

up vote 3 down vote accepted

You need to escape the backslashes between the backticks.

FOO=`echo "foo[bar]" | sed 's/\\[/\\\\[/g'` && echo $FOO

Alternatively, use $() (this is actually the recommended method).

FOO=$(echo "foo[bar]" | sed 's/\[/\\[/g') && echo $FOO
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Thanks everyone! – Nico Sep 29 '09 at 14:50
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How about not using backticks but use $() ?

FOO=$(echo "foo[bar]" | sed 's/\[/\\[/g') && echo $FOO

if you insist on using backticks, I think you need to extra escape all \ into double \

FOO=`echo "foo[bar]" | sed 's/\\[/\\\\[/g'` && echo $FOO
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+1 for $() Never, ever use backticks. There are so many advantaged to using $(). mywiki.wooledge.org/BashFAQ/082 – Dennis Williamson Sep 29 '09 at 13:29
2  
and +1 for the comment referring to Bash FAQ 82 – nos Sep 29 '09 at 13:33
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Usually, it's a case of underescaping

FOO=`echo "foo[bar]" | sed 's/\[/\\\[/g'` && echo $FOO
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