I want to delete one or more specific line numbers from a file. How would I do this using sed?

share|improve this question
1  
Can you give a more specific example of what you want? How will you decide which lines to remove? – Mark Byers Jan 21 '10 at 20:14
1  
Based upon line number – Justin Ethier Jan 21 '10 at 20:15
up vote 238 down vote accepted

If you want to delete lines 5 through 10 and 12:

sed -e '5,10d;12d' file

This will print the results to the screen. If you want to save the results to the same file:

sed -i.bak -e '5,10d;12d' file

This will back the file up to file.bak, and delete the given lines.

share|improve this answer
22  
Not all unixes have gnu sed with "-i". Don't make the mistake of falling back to "sed cmd file > file", which will wipe out your file. – pra Jan 22 '10 at 6:53
1  
what If I wanted to delete the 5th line up to the last line? – Michelle May 11 '13 at 3:58
6  
@WearetheWorld sed -e '5,$d' file – Brian Campbell May 11 '13 at 20:12
1  
@BrianCampbell What should i do to delete only a particular line ?? – Kanagavelu Sugumar Apr 24 '14 at 10:56
8  
@KanagaveluSugumar sed -e '5d' file. The syntax is <address><command>; where <address> can be either a single line like 5 or a range of lines like 5,10, and the command d deletes the given line or lines. The addresses can also be regular expressions, or the dollar sign $ indicating the last line of the file. – Brian Campbell Apr 24 '14 at 14:30

and awk as well

awk 'NR!~/^(5|10|25)$/' file
share|improve this answer
    
NB: That awk line worked more reliably for me than the sed variant (between OS-X and Ubuntu Linux) – Jay Taylor Feb 23 '12 at 19:13
    
Note that this doesn't delete anything in the file. It just prints the file without these lines to stdout. So you also need to redirect the output to a temp file, and then move the temp file to replace the original. – mivk Jun 5 '15 at 9:00
$ cat foo
1
2
3
4
5
$ sed -e '2d;4d' foo
1
3
5
$ 
share|improve this answer

You can delete a particular single line with its line number by sed -i '33d' file

This will delete the line on 33 line number and save the updated file.

share|improve this answer

This is very often a symptom of an antipattern. The tool which produced the line numbers may well be replaced with one which deletes the lines right away. For example;

grep -nh error logfile | cut -d: -f1 | deletelines logfile

(where deletelines is the utility you are imagining you need) is the same as

grep -v error logfile

Having said that, if you are in a situation where you genuinely need to perform this task, you can generate a simple sed script from the file of line numbers. Humorously (but perhaps slightly confusingly) you can do this with sed.

sed 's%$%d%' linenumbers

This accepts a file of line numbers, one per line, and produces, on standard output, the same line numbers with d appended after each. This is a valid sed script, which we can save to a file, or (on some platforms) pipe to another sed instance:

sed 's%$%d%' linenumbers | sed -f - logfile

On some platforms, sed -f does not understand the option argument - to mean standard input, so you have to redirect the script to a temporary file, and clean it up when you are done, or maybe replace the lone dash with /dev/stdin or /proc/$pid/fd/1 if your OS (or shell) has that.

As always, you can add -i before the -f option to have sed edit the target file in place, instead of producing the result on standard output. On *BSDish platforms (including OSX) you need to supply an explicit argument to -i as well; a common idiom is to supply an empty argument; -i ''.

share|improve this answer
    
I don't quite agree with "symptom of an antipattern". Markup-based file types (e.g. XML or JSON) require specific lines at the end in order to be valid files. In that case, it's often the most reasonable approach to remove those lines, put into the file what you want to be added and then re-add those lines, because putting the lines in between straight away can be much more effort, and goes against the potential desire to avoid extra tools like sed as much as you can. – Egor Hans Nov 12 '17 at 12:02

I would like to propose a generalization with awk.

When the file is made by blocks of a fixed size and the lines to delete are repeated for each block, awk can work fine in such a way

awk '{nl=((NR-1)%2000)+1; if ( (nl<714) || ((nl>1025)&&(nl<1029)) ) print  $0}'
 OriginFile.dat > MyOutputCuttedFile.dat

In this example the size for the block is 2000 and I want to print the lines [1..713] and [1026..1029].

  • NR is the variable used by awk to store the current line number.
  • % gives the remainder (or modulus) of the division of two integers;
  • nl=((NR-1)%BLOCKSIZE)+1 Here we write in the variable nl the line number inside the current block. (see below)
  • || and && are the logical operator OR and AND.
  • print $0 writes the full line

Why ((NR-1)%BLOCKSIZE)+1:
(NR-1) We need a shift of one because 1%3=1, 2%3=2, but 3%3=0.
  +1   We add again 1 because we want to restore the desired order.

+-----+------+----------+------------+
| NR  | NR%3 | (NR-1)%3 | (NR-1)%3+1 |
+-----+------+----------+------------+
|  1  |  1   |    0     |     1      |
|  2  |  2   |    1     |     2      |
|  3  |  0   |    2     |     3      |
|  4  |  1   |    0     |     1      |
+-----+------+----------+------------+

share|improve this answer
2  
I admire the way you live up to your madness-inducing name. – Jukka Dahlbom Apr 23 '15 at 8:09

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.