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recently I had to write a little script that parsed VMs in XenServer and as the names of the VMs are mostly with white spaces in e.g Windows XP or Windows Server 2008, I had to trim those white spaces and replace them with underscores _ . I found a simple solution to do this using sed which is great tool when it comes to string manipulation.

echo "This is just a test" | sed -e 's/ /_/g'

returns

This_is_just_a_test

Are there other ways to accomplish this?

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  • 8
    and the question is ?
    – RageZ
    Nov 10, 2009 at 8:44
  • 2
    Hi latz, Stackoverflow is a questions and answers site. You ask questions and others answer it, or you can answer questions from others. If you want to share your knowledge, you can ask a question, then answer it yourself (after leaving some time for others to answer as well).
    – mouviciel
    Nov 10, 2009 at 8:53
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    oups thought I would add this knowledge that way so it is stored here. Anyway will do it like u said next time, by answering my own question :)
    – flazzarini
    Nov 10, 2009 at 10:00

2 Answers 2

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You can do it using only the shell, no need for tr or sed

$ str="This is just a test"
$ echo ${str// /_}
This_is_just_a_test
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  • 5
    Or convert all non-ASCII word chars to underscores: ${str//[^a-zA-Z0-9]/_}; either way, if you're not sticking to pure POSIX shell, then use the features available to you.
    – guns
    Nov 10, 2009 at 8:52
  • there might be punctuations that are legit as well. we never know.
    – ghostdog74
    Nov 10, 2009 at 8:56
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This is borderline programming, but look into using tr:

$ echo "this is just a test" | tr -s ' ' | tr ' ' '_'

Should do it. The first invocation squeezes the spaces down, the second replaces with underscore. You probably need to add TABs and other whitespace characters, this is for spaces only.

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