20

This works fine on Linux (Debian):

sed -e 's,^[ \t]*psd\(.*\)\;,,' 

On mac, I believe I have to use the -E flag, instead of -e:

sed -E 's,^[ \t]*psd\(.*\)\;,,'

but the regexp does not match, and hence does not remove the lines I want.

Any tips on how to solve this?

Sample input:

apa
bepa
    psd(cepa);
depa psd(epa);
  psd(fepa gepa hepa);

For that input, the expected output is:

apa
bepa
depa psd(epa);
1
  • 1
    Your expected output should have a couple of blank lines. You don't need to escape a semicolon. Jul 20, 2011 at 13:05

5 Answers 5

15

The -E flag means to use extended regular expressions. You should just use -e, as on Linux. The sed in Mac OS X is based on BSD sed, so doesn't have the GNU extensions.

After copying your sample input:

[~ 507] pbpaste | sed -e 's,^[[:space:]]*psd\(.*\);,,'
apa
bepa

depa psd(epa);
1
  • 2
    -E also works on gnu sed, it's an undocumented option they added to be compliant with posix
    – NDM
    May 3, 2017 at 13:20
9

Alternatively you can use the GNU version of sed instead of the implementation provided by Mac OSX.

Mac port provides a port for it sudo port install gsed. After installing it you can use gsed instead of sed.

3
  • 10
    Or brew install gnu-sed --default-names for brewing people :) May 12, 2014 at 21:25
  • 3
    For those who like @AntonBabenko's, just note that --default-names is deprecated in recent versions. Use brew install gnu-sed --with-default-names and then reopen your terminal instead.
    – Bilal Akil
    Jun 30, 2015 at 12:25
  • 2
    Homebrew's --with-default-names option has been deprecated. (so have all options on official formulae). But you can make your own alias just by doing ln -s /usr/local/bin/gsed /usr/local/bin/sed. But personally I wouldn't do this. Some shell script might rely on the behavior of the built in BSD sed and you might end up with some mysterious problems because of this.
    – Chris
    Jan 19, 2021 at 1:50
8

The '\t' is not standard in 'sed', it is a GNU extension.

To match a 'tab', you need to put a real 'tab' in your script. This is easy in a file, harder in shell.

The same problem can happen in AIX, Solaris and HP-UX or other UNIXes.

1
  • 6
    I missed that in my answer. You can always use POSIX character classes, either [[:space:]] or [[:blank:]] would work. To get a literal tab in the shell, pressing ctrl-v will give you a literal for the next character. Jul 20, 2011 at 14:43
4

In addition to the answers above, you can exploit a useful (but shell-dependent) trick. In bash, use $'\t' to introduce a literal tab character. The following works on my Mac:

sed -e 's,^[ '$'\t''*psd\(.*\);,,'

Note how the whole sed expression consists now of three concatenated strings.

This trick might be useful in case you need the tab character specifically, without matching other whitespace (i.e., when [[:blank:]] would be too inclusive). For the above, the -e flag is not essential.

2

I've check this sample input on my machine and faced the problem when in third line was tab character from the beginning of line and regexp ^[ \t]*psd\(.*\)\; didn't match it. This can be passed by sed character class [[:blank:]] that equal combination of space and tab character. So you can try the following:

sed -E 's,^[[:blank:]]*psd\(.*\)\;,,' demo.txt

this produce the following output:

apa
bepa

depa psd(epa);

but it keeps the empty lines in result. To get the exact output as you expected I used the following:

sed -n '/^[[:blank:]]*psd\(.*\)\;/!p' demo.txt

result:

apa
bepa
depa psd(epa);

this is just inverse output of matching pattern (!p).

EDIT: To match tab characters in regexp in sed (macosx) you can also try recommendation from How can I insert a tab character with sed on OS X?

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.