I have tried:
echo -e "egg\t \t\t salad" | sed -E 's/[[:blank:]]+/\t/g'
Which results in:
eggtsalad
And...
echo -e "egg\t \t\t salad" | sed -E 's/[[:blank:]]+/\\t/g'
Which results in:
egg\tsalad
What I would like:
egg salad
Try: Ctrl+V and then press Tab.
Use ANSI-C style quoting: $'string'
sed $'s/foo/\t/'
So in your example, simply add a $
:
echo -e "egg\t \t\t salad" | sed -E $'s/[[:blank:]]+/\t/g'
OSX's sed
only understands doesn't understand \t
in the pattern, not in the replacement\t
at all, since it's essentially the ancient 4.2BSD sed
left over from 1982 or thenabouts. Use a literal tab (which in bash
and vim
is Ctrl
+V
, Tab
), or install GNU coreutils
to get a more reasonable sed
.
"
quotes, the shell will have processed the backslash and sed
won't see it. With sed
, and regexes in general, '
quoting is strongly preferred.
Mar 22, 2011 at 22:20
sed
that was slightly smarter than the 4.2BSD one, but in fact the only character escape it supports is \n
.
Mar 22, 2011 at 22:28
sed
usage is in Linux.)
Mar 22, 2011 at 22:32
Another option is to use $(printf '\t')
to insert a tab, e.g.:
echo -e "egg\t \t\t salad" | sed -E "s/[[:blank:]]+/$(printf '\t')/g"
Ctrl+V Tab
since you can copy and paste the entire command and share it more easily without losing the control character.
A workaround for tab on osx is to use "\ "
, an escape char followed by four spaces.
If you are trying to find the last instance of a pattern, say a " })};"
and insert a file on a newline after that pattern, your sed
command on osx would look like this:
sed -i '' -e $'/^\ \})};.*$/ r fileWithTextIWantToInsert' FileIWantToChange
The markup makes it unclear: the escape char must be followed by four spaces in order for sed
to register a tab character on osx.
The same trick works if the pattern you want to find is preceded by two spaces, and I imagine it will work for finding a pattern preceded by any number of spaces as well.