I tried grep -v '^$'
in Linux and that didn't work. This file came from a Windows file system.
17 Answers
Try the following:
grep -v -e '^$' foo.txt
The -e
option allows regex patterns for matching.
The single quotes around ^$
makes it work for Cshell. Other shells will be happy with either single or double quotes.
UPDATE: This works for me for a file with blank lines or "all white space" (such as windows lines with \r\n
style line endings), whereas the above only removes files with blank lines and unix style line endings:
grep -v -e '^[[:space:]]*$' foo.txt
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That egrep would only work for files with zero or 1 space on the line, not for files with 2 or more spaces. Change ? to *. Dec 8, 2012 at 9:42
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8This should be
grep -E -v
, everything after-e
is interpreted as the pattern.– jazzpiAug 3, 2015 at 17:10 -
15
grep -v -e '^[[:space:]]*$' -e '^#' file
will give you all non-blank, non-comment lines in a script or config file (or any file type that uses the hash character for comments).– palswimFeb 27, 2018 at 23:11 -
6"The
-e
option allows regex patterns for matching." That is very misleading.-e
is a (POSIX-)definition for:This can be used to specify multiple search patterns, or to protect a pattern beginning with a hyphen (-).
(from the manual). Grep already expects a (basic) regular expression by default. For this pattern, you may leave out-e
entirely:grep -v '^[[:space:]]*$' foo.txt
.– YetiJul 1, 2020 at 10:22 -
If you're dealing with files that might have windows-style CR+LF line breaks but don't want to also exclude lines with other whitespace, then use this regex:
'^[[:cnrl:]]?$'
.– ChrisFeb 3, 2021 at 21:20
Keep it simple.
grep . filename.txt
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3
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3@LưuVĩnhPhúc It should output all the lines in the file except blank lines. Feb 19, 2017 at 23:33
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4This works for me on files from a linux based system but not on files from Windows. Presumably because of Windows line-ending characters.– user5012123Feb 9, 2018 at 15:07
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1I'm upvoting this even though it doesn't quite solve the OP's problem of handling a file with Windows line endings, but since I don't have that issue, this turned out to be the perfect solution for me.– David ZApr 16, 2018 at 1:27
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3
Use:
$ dos2unix file
$ grep -v "^$" file
Or just simply awk:
awk 'NF' file
If you don't have dos2unix, then you can use tools like tr:
tr -d '\r' < "$file" > t ; mv t "$file"
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1Can't find the program dos2unix. Is that for Windows? the ask command doesn't work either. Aug 8, 2010 at 1:36
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Good point about converting to UNIX-style line endings otherwise regular expressions may not work as expected. Nothing here worked for me until I converted the line endings.– Ryan H.Aug 31, 2016 at 14:41
grep -v "^[[:space:]]*$"
The -v makes it print lines that do not completely match
===Each part explained===
^ match start of line
[[:space:]] match whitespace- spaces, tabs, carriage returns, etc.
* previous match (whitespace) may exist from 0 to infinite times
$ match end of line
Running the code-
$ echo "
> hello
>
> ok" |
> grep -v "^[[:space:]]*$"
hello
ok
To understand more about how/why this works, I recommend reading up on regular expressions. http://www.regular-expressions.info/tutorial.html
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2How and why does this work? Your answer would be much better if you could explain. For instance your regular expression matches the beginning of the string then one or more spaces using the POSIX standard then the end of the string, i.e. with grep -v it removes all lines that are only spaces. Right? What happens if there are no spaces; it's simply a newline character?– BenDec 7, 2012 at 21:20
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As my example shows, even only an empty line is removed (the first line). I added more information, so hopefully that helps. :)– SeperoDec 8, 2012 at 1:02
If you have sequences of multiple blank lines in a row, and would like only one blank line per sequence, try
grep -v "unwantedThing" foo.txt | cat -s
cat -s
suppresses repeated empty output lines.
Your output would go from
match1
match2
to
match1
match2
The three blank lines in the original output would be compressed or "squeezed" into one blank line.
The same as the previous answers:
grep -v -e '^$' foo.txt
Here, grep -e
means the extended version of grep. '^$' means that there isn't any character between ^(Start of line) and $(end of line). '^' and '$' are regex characters.
So the command grep -v
will print all the lines that do not match this pattern (No characters between ^ and $).
This way, empty blank lines are eliminated.
-
-e
does not mean "the extended version of grep", maybe you are confused with-E
? The manual clearly says that-e
just explicitly says that a pattern follows. Since the pattern does not start with a dash, and you are only defining one pattern anyway, you might as well leave it out as by default grep expects one regex pattern:grep -v '^$' foo.txt
(no need for extended regex functionality). Also it is worth mentioning that this does not eliminate the blank lines in the file, only that which is piped through the output. For that case,sed -i
would be the right tool.– YetiJul 1, 2020 at 10:09
Do lines in the file have whitespace characters?
If so then
grep "\S" file.txt
Otherwise
grep . file.txt
Answer obtained from: https://serverfault.com/a/688789
I prefer using egrep
, though in my test with a genuine file with blank line your approach worked fine (though without quotation marks in my test). This worked too:
egrep -v "^(\r?\n)?$" filename.txt
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Tried that. Blank lines are still showing. Could this be because the file was made in Windows? Aug 8, 2010 at 0:25
This code removes blank lines and lines that start with "#"
grep -v "^#" file.txt | grep -v ^[[:space:]]*$
It's true that the use of grep -v -e '^$' can work, however it does not remove blank lines that have 1 or more spaces in them. I found the easiest and simplest answer for removing blank lines is the use of awk. The following is a modified a bit from the awk guys above:
awk 'NF' foo.txt
But since this question is for using grep I'm going to answer the following:
grep -v '^ *$' foo.txt
Note: the blank space between the ^ and *.
Or you can use the \s to represent blank space like this:
grep -v '^\s*$' foo.txt
I tried hard, but this seems to work (assuming \r
is biting you here):
printf "\r" | egrep -xv "[[:space:]]*"
egrep -v "^\s\s+"
egrep already do regex, and the \s is white space.
The + duplicates current pattern.
The ^ is for the start
Use:
grep pattern filename.txt | uniq
-
uniq
will reduce adjoining blank lines to just one blank line, but does not remove them completely. Still, I like trying to useuniq
like that. Sorting first would effectively remove all blank lines--leaving just one, but rearranging the line order may not be acceptable. Jan 16, 2013 at 2:43 -
Good point. This will also chomp repeated lines. I guess my solution introduces bugs.– baitisjJan 17, 2013 at 5:57
Here is another way of removing the white lines and lines starting with the #
sign. I think this is quite useful to read configuration files.
[root@localhost ~]# cat /etc/sudoers | egrep -v '^(#|$)'
Defaults requiretty
Defaults !visiblepw
Defaults always_set_home
Defaults env_reset
Defaults env_keep = "COLORS DISPLAY HOSTNAME HISTSIZE INPUTRC KDEDIR
LS_COLORS"
root ALL=(ALL) ALL
%wheel ALL=(ALL) ALL
stack ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL
Read lines from file exclude EMPTY Lines
grep -v '^$' folderlist.txt
folderlist.txt
folder1/test
folder2
folder3
folder4/backup
folder5/backup
Results will be:
folder1/test
folder2
folder3
folder4/backup
folder5/backup