I suspect the issue is that your file filename.csv
contains non-ASCII (probably Unicode) characters and your sed
is expecting ASCII.
The first thing to do is to examine the file and see if that is the case. I think you can do that with:
cat -vet filename.csv
and you will probably see highlighted characters that are non ASCII. Alternatively you can use iconv
to try and convert it to ASCII and see if it gives an error because there are non-ASCII characters in there.
If there are non-ASCII characters in there (like accents and non-english characters and some times smileys, apostrophes and quotes), you either need to tell sed
that they are there, or remove the unhappy characters if you don't really need them.
To see what sed
is expecting, you need to run locale
and paste the output into your original question by clicking edit
underneath it. Then you may need to change your locale to make sed
happier about Unicode like I suggested in the comments.
Hope that helps!