I run several substitution commands as the core of a colorize script for maven.
One of the sed
commands uses a regular expression which works find in the shell as discussed here. The current (not working) implementation can be found here.
When I include one of the variants of the command into the script different behavior occurs:
Variant 1:
$ sed -re "s/([a-zA-Z0-9./\\ :-]+)/\1/g"
Adapted to the script:
-re "s/WARNING: ([a-zA-Z0-9./\\ :-]+)/${warn}WARNING: \1${c_end}/g" \
Error: The shell outputs the same information as if I would type $ sed
. Strange!?
Variant 2:
$ sed -e "s/\([a-zA-Z0-9./\\ :-]\+\)/\1/g"
Adapted to the script:
-e "s/WARNING: \([a-zA-Z0-9./\\ :-]\+\)/${warn}WARNING: \1${c_end}/g" \
Error:
sed: -e expression #7, char 59: invalid reference \1 on `s' command's RHS
-i
(edit in place option) with-re
, resulting in-ire
(so that-i
was consuming there
fragment as itsSUFFIX
argument and hence the extended regex mode was not being enabled); changing it to-i -re
fixed the issue.'
and double quotes"
are treated slightly different, especially when interpreting$vars
. For example:sudo sh -c "sed -r -i 's/(^.+_supplicant.conf)/\1${MTXT}/' /etc/network/interfaces"
works, but:sudo sh -c 'sed -r -i "s/(^.+_supplicant.conf)/\1${MTXT}/" /etc/network/interfaces'
does not.