152

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

2
  • 18
    In my case I had combined a -i (edit in place option) with -re, resulting in -ire (so that -i was consuming the re fragment as its SUFFIX argument and hence the extended regex mode was not being enabled); changing it to -i -re fixed the issue. Mar 18, 2017 at 6:18
  • It's also to notice that single quotes ' 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.
    – not2qubit
    Jan 2, 2018 at 9:26

4 Answers 4

110

Don't you need to actually capture for that to work? i.e. for variant #2:

-r -e "s/WARNING: (\([a-zA-Z0-9./\\ :-]\+\))/${warn}WARNING: \1${c_end}/g" \

(Note: untested)

Without the -r argument back-references (like \1) won't work unless each parenthesis is escaped with a \ character.

With -r, argument back-references (like \1) won't work unless the parenthesis are NOT escaped.

5
  • 57
    The -r option to sed appears to be necessary for the back-reference to work. E.g sed -e 's/([[:digit:]])/is a digit/' works but sed -e 's/([[:digit:]])/\1 is a digit/ produces the original error without -r to sed. NOTE: the first invocation of sed searches for a literal (<digit>) and is not a capture group. Mar 24, 2016 at 14:58
  • The comment below the answer is actually an answer. Maybe you can edit your answer to reflect it.
    – miroxlav
    Sep 3, 2017 at 10:21
  • @AndrewFalanga you should have posted your comment as an answer
    – sanmai
    Feb 8, 2018 at 6:58
  • 5
    Nevermind my mistake was to use -ire instead of use -ri. Order matters :-)
    – m3nda
    Jun 10, 2018 at 15:22
  • 2
    -r, --regexp-extended = use extended regular expressions in the script. In most current versions the -E and -r both can be used. Extended as opposed to basic.
    – sastorsl
    May 12, 2022 at 15:38
63

This error is common for parentheses that are not escaped. Escape them and try again.


For example:

/^$/b
:loop
$!{
N
/\n$/!b loop
}
s/\n(.)/\1/g

Should be escaped with backslashes before each parenthesis:

/^$/b
:loop
$!{
N
/\n$/!b loop
}
s/\n\(.\)/\1/g
1
  • 10
    Attention, if you use -r you don't have to escape the parentheses.
    – qräbnö
    Jan 13, 2018 at 12:52
36

If the -r/--regexp-extended option is not provided, then the capturing parentheses must be escaped.

8

You need escape the / after the .

sed -e "s/\([a-zA-Z0-9.\/\\ :-]\+\)/\1/g"

Or if you don't want to worry about escaping, use |

sed -e "s|\([a-zA-Z0-9./\\ :-]\+\)|\1|g"

EDIT:

sed -e "s|WARNING: \([a-zA-Z0-9.-/\\ :]+\)|${warn}WARNING: \1${c_end}|g"
3
  • Sound reasonable. But it does not work in the context of the script.
    – JJD
    May 19, 2013 at 18:21
  • Sorry. The edit raises the error: sed: -e expression #7, char 58: Invalid range end. @Denis' answer works.
    – JJD
    May 19, 2013 at 18:29
  • 2
    Ok, then +1 for @Denis' answer
    – slackmart
    May 19, 2013 at 18:35

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