12

I have the following command to replace Unicode characters with ASCII ones.

sed -i 's/Ã/A/g'

The problem is à isn't recognized by the sed command in my Unix environment so I'd assume you replace it with its hexadecimal value. What would the syntax look like if I were to use C3 instead?

I'm using this command as a template for other characters i'd like to replace with blank spaces such as:

sed -i 's/©/ /g'

3
  • you mean like this? stackoverflow.com/questions/22450563/…
    – Leo
    Nov 21, 2014 at 0:35
  • 1
    What character set does your terminal use? And what encoding does the input text use? Ã in UTF-8 is 0xC3 0x83, and character 0x83 is a control code in ISO 8859-1, so that might be a problem. I suppose you can’t just set LANG=en_US.UTF-8 on your system. Nov 21, 2014 at 3:03
  • "sed" will do the job. Please see my answer.
    – ajaaskel
    Nov 21, 2014 at 7:51

4 Answers 4

20

It is possible to use hex values in "sed".

echo "Ã" | hexdump -C
00000000  c3 83 0a                                          |...|
00000003

Ok, that character is two byte combination "c3 83". Let's replace it with single byte "A":

echo "Ã" |sed 's/\xc3\x83/A/g'
A

Explanation: \x indicates for "sed" that a hex code follows.

4
  • Usually I would write those with <<< but piping gives better idea for an average reader what's going on.
    – ajaaskel
    Nov 21, 2014 at 7:43
  • What do you mean "write them with <<<"? Dec 28, 2015 at 2:14
  • 1
    In case you were wondering what the 0a in the hexdump was, it is the LF character from the echo. That's why it's ignored. Or you could use echo -n to not print the LF.
    – wisbucky
    May 5, 2016 at 17:55
  • I had to pass all the three parts (not two) to sed to successfully replace 'e2 80 af' character. Can this be a general rule?
    – ka3ak
    Dec 24, 2017 at 7:51
9

You can use iconv:

iconv -f utf-8 -t ascii//translit -o output.txt input.txt
3
  • 3
    You mean GNU iconv. Not all versions of iconv support transliteration.
    – user539810
    Nov 21, 2014 at 0:42
  • 1
    Yes, but he can give it a try
    – midori
    Nov 21, 2014 at 0:44
  • Thanks but i'm using this as a template to create other sed commands that will replace certain characters with blank spaces for example: sed -i 's/©/ /g' Nov 21, 2014 at 0:45
8

Try setting LANG=C and then run it over the Unicode range:
echo "hi ☠ there ☠" | LANG=C sed "s/[\x80-\xFF]//g"

4

There is also uconv, from ICU.

Examples:

  • uconv -x "::NFD; [:Nonspacing Mark:] > ; ::NFC;": to remove accents
  • uconv -x "::Latin; ::Latin-ASCII;": for a transliteration latin/ascii
  • uconv -x "::Latin; ::Latin-ASCII; ([^\x00-\x7F]) > ;": for a transliteration latin/ascii and removal of remaining code points > 0x7F
  • ...

echo "À l'école ☠" | uconv -x "::Latin; ::Latin-ASCII; ([^\x00-\x7F]) > ;" gives: A l'ecole

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