In sed, p
prints the addressed line(s), while P
prints only the first part (up to a newline character \n
) of the addressed line. If you have only one line in the buffer, p
and P
are the same thing, but logically p
should be used.
Let's look at an academic but easy example. Let's assume we want to print line number 1, we can do
$ echo "line 1
$ This is line 2" | sed -n '1p'
> line 1
We could also do
$ echo "line 1
$ This is line 2" | sed -n '1P'
> line 1
Both commands do the same thing, since there is no newline character in the buffer.
But now we use the N
command to add a second line into the buffer:
$ echo "line 1
$ This is line 2" | sed -n '1{N; p}'
> line 1
> This is line 2
Now we had 2 lines in the buffer and we print them both with p
.
$ echo "line 1
$ This is line 2" | sed -n '1{N; P}'
> line 1
Again we had 2 lines in the buffer, but we printed only the first one, since we were using P
and not p
.