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I have 7 lines of text:

a
b
c
d
e
f
g

Now I want to add characters to the end of each line, to end up with:

a,
b,
c,
d,
e,
f,
g,

I found that I can use the "sed" command and run my selection through sed using "Filter through command" in Textmate

sed 's/$/,/'

Now, one question remains: how do I turn this into a Textmate command that takes input in some sort of way (so it knows what text to append)?

(My tries in doing this have proven unsuccessful)

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4 Answers

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Pop this into a command within the Text bundle, it'll append whatever is in the clipboard to the end of all lines that have been selected:

#!/bin/bash
if [[ $(pbpaste|wc -l) -eq 0 ]]
    then r=`pbpaste`
    sed 's/$/'$r'/'
    else sed 's/$/,/'
fi

It's currently limited to appending one line's worth of text, if the clipboard contains more than one line it will default to a comma at the end of the selected lines.

Edit:

To take this a little further, here's a version that provides a dialog box which prompts for the input of the string that will be appended to each line in the selection:

#!/bin/bash
r=$(CocoaDialog inputbox --title "String to be appended to EOL" \
   --informative-text "Enter string:" \
   --button1 "Okay" --button2 "Cancel")

[[ $(head -n1 <<<"$r") == "2" ]] && exit_discard

r=$(tail -n1 <<<"$r")

sed "s/$/$r/"
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vote up 2 vote down

Create a new command in the bundle editor

#!/bin/bash
sed 's/$/,/'

On the input dropdown select Selected text or Nothing
On the output select Replace existing text

I just tested it and it works fine.
You can also choose a keyboard shortcut to make it more efficient.

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vote up 1 vote down

In Text menu there is already a command "Edit each line in selection" exactly do this. It will put cursor on first line and what you type there repeated on each line.

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I know; but it doesn’t seem to be able to prepend. If I place my cursor at the beginning of the line, hit the shortcut, then it jumps to the end. I could use column selections but then I'm using the mouse again, which isn't speedy enough. – Wolfr May 3 at 20:17
1  
column selection doesn't need mouse. use page up + shift and press option when done. I don't know about sed. but in textmate you can write bundle command very easily that replace selection with sed processed text if you know sed/ruby/regex+ruby etc. – nexneo May 4 at 18:30
vote up 1 vote down

If you're willing to avoid the command route and simply use the Find/Replace dialog simply do as follows:

  • highlight/select the lines you'd like to append to
  • open the Find dialog
  • check 'Regular Expressions'
  • in the 'Find' field, add '$' (to indicate the end of the line)
  • in the 'Replace' field, add ',' (what you want appended)
  • hold Option, this will change "Replace All" to "In Selection"

This technique can be applied in a number of other useful ways. For example, changing '$' to '^' if you want to prefix each line.

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