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There are many questions asking about how to use a variable within a sed pattern, for example: sed "s/re/$VAR/" file, but I want to perform a substitution on a variable. So far, I have been using echo to do this:

echo "$VAR" | sed 's/re/new/'

But, though this works, it seems messy. Is there a simpler/more elegant way of doing this in bash or zsh?

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  • 2
    If it needs to be a regular expression, I don't think there is another way. For simple replacements (in bash) you can do echo ${VAR/match/replace} Mar 10, 2016 at 15:17
  • I agree witht sean, that's not messy, as it's the way to go. Or you can use specific shell tricks (for bash or zsh)
    – zmo
    Mar 10, 2016 at 15:18
  • @zmo, eh? What Sean suggested (and I agree is not messy) is what you're calling "shell-specific tricks". (The specific PEs at hand are not actually bash and zsh specific at all -- rather, they're originally ksh behavior, dating back at least to ksh88, that bash and zsh are both compatible with. Notably, ksh88 predates the POSIX sh standard's publication, so even though the POSIX sh standard didn't include all the PEs that ksh did, their meaning is very well-established). Mar 10, 2016 at 15:52

2 Answers 2

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You can do it like this:

sed 's/re/new' <<< "$var"

If you want to do that and update the variable you can do this:

var=$(sed 's/re/new' <<< "$var")
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  • Ah, thank you, that works perfectly. I didn't know about <<<
    – squirl
    Mar 10, 2016 at 15:22
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If you don't want to use sed, you can use "parameter expansion" for search and replace within a parameter; quoting the Bash manual:

 ${parameter/pattern/string} 

The pattern is expanded to produce a pattern just as in filename expansion. Parameter is expanded and the longest match of pattern against its value is replaced with string.

If pattern begins with /, all matches of pattern are replaced with string. Normally only the first match is replaced. If pattern begins with #, it must match at the beginning of the expanded value of parameter. If pattern begins with %, it must match at the end of the expanded value of parameter.

If string is null, matches of pattern are deleted and the / following pattern may be omitted. If parameter is @ or *, the substitution operation is applied to each positional parameter in turn, and the expansion is the resultant list. If parameter is an array variable subscripted with @ or *, the substitution operation is applied to each member of the array in turn, and the expansion is the resultant list.

Parameter expansion is not limited to this kind of substitution, there are many more, see the manual.

A few examples

Leaving away quoting for readability.

  1. Simple variables

    $ var='abcabc'
    $ echo ${var/a/X}   # Replace first 'a'
    Xbcabc
    $ echo ${var//a/X}  # Replace all 'a'
    XbcXbc
    $ echo ${var/a}     # Remove 'a'
    bcabc
    $ echo ${var//a}    # Remove all 'a'
    bcbc
    $ echo ${var/#b}    # Try to remove 'b' from start of string - no-op
    abcabc
    $ echo ${var/#a}    # Remove 'a' from start of string
    bcabc
    $ echo ${var/%b}    # Try to remove 'b' from end of string - no-op
    abcabc
    $ echo ${var/%c}    # Remove 'c' from end of string
    abcab
    
  2. Positional parameters

    $ set -- abcabc defdef abcabc # Set $1, $2 and $3
    $ echo ${@/a/X}               # Replace first 'a' for each parameter
    Xbcabc defdef Xbcabc
    $ echo ${@//a/X}              # Replace all 'a' for each parameter
    XbcXbc defdef XbcXbc
    $ echo ${@/?/X}               # Replace first occurrence of any character
    Xbcabc Xefdef Xbcabc
    $ echo ${@//?/X}              # Replace all characters
    XXXXXX XXXXXX XXXXXX
    
  3. Arrays

    $ arr=(abcabc defdef abcabc) # Create array
    $ echo ${arr[@]/a/X}         # Replace first 'a' in each element
    Xbcabc defdef Xbcabc
    $ echo ${arr[@]//a/X}        # Replace all 'a' in each element
    XbcXbc defdef XbcXbc
    $ echo ${arr[@]/?/X}         # Replace first character in each element
    Xbcabc Xefdef Xbcabc
    $ echo ${arr[@]//?/X}        # Replace all characters in all elements
    XXXXXX XXXXXX XXXXXX
    
  4. Combinations

    These can also be combined:

    $ arr=(patxxx xxpatxx xxxpat)  # Create array
    $ echo ${arr[@]/pat/X}         # Replace 'pat' in each element
    Xxxx xxXxx xxxX
    $ echo ${arr[@]/%pat/X}        # Replace 'pat' if it matches at the end
    patxxx xxpatxx xxxX
    $ echo ${arr[@]/#pat/X}        # Replace 'pat' if it matches at the beginning
    Xxxx xxpatxx xxxpat
    
  5. Extended pattern matching

    Together with extended patterns, parameter expansion for search and replace becomes quite powerful:

    $ printf -v var "%b" ' have_spaces\t'     # Has space and tab
    $ echo "$var" | cat -A                    # Show whitespace
     have_spaces^I$
    $ shopt -s extglob                        # Turn on extended pattern matching
    $ echo "${var//+([[:space:]])}" | cat -A  # Remove all whitespace
    have_spaces$
    

    The example is somewhat contrived as the same problem could be solved simpler – the point is that it's pretty flexible.

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  • Thanks, that works for simple things, but is there a way to do something like sed 's/re/new/g' <<<"$VAR"
    – squirl
    Mar 10, 2016 at 15:25
  • pattern is not treated as a regular expression, it is a glob. Mar 10, 2016 at 15:25
  • @Samadi That would be ${VAR//re/new}, I've added a few examples. Mar 10, 2016 at 15:28

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