A sed solution, mostly to illustrate that sed is probably not the best choice to do this:
$sed -E '1{h;b};/^$/{n;h;b};G;s/^(.*)(.*)\n\1$/\2/' infile
bar
fo
foo
fooo
foooo
sample
Text1
Text2
Text3
prefix
FooBar
BarFoo
Here is how it works:
1 { # on the first line
h # copy pattern buffer to hold buffer
b # skip to end of cycle
}
/^$/ { # if line is empty
n # get next line into pattern buffer
h # copy pattern buffer to hold buffer
b # skip to end of cycle
}
G # append hold buffer to pattern buffer
s/^(.*)(.*)\n\1$/\2/ # substitute
The complex part is in the substitution. Before the substitution, the pattern buffer holds something like this:
prefixFooBar\nprefix
The substitution now matches two capture groups, the first of which is referenced by what's between \n
and the end of the string – the prefix we fetched from the hold buffer.
The replacement is then the rest of the original line, with the prefix removed.
Remarks:
- This works with GNU sed; older GNU sed version might need
-r
instead of -E
-E
is just for convenience; without it, the substitution would look like
s/^\(.*\)\(.*\)\n\1$/\2/
but still work.
For macOS sed, it works with literal linebreaks between commands:
sed -E '1{
h
b
}
/^$/{
n
h
b
}
G
s/^(.*)(.*)\n\2$/\2/' infile