The following is working as expected. I want to replace the word "me" with \'
echo "test ' this" | sed 's/'"'"'/me/g'
test me this
Expected result:
test \' this
Is it possible to escape double quotes as well in the same command?
Your question is a little confusing since there's no me
in the original string to replace. However, I think I have it. Let me paraphrase:
I have a
sed
command which can successfully replace a single quote'
with the wordme
. I want a similar one which can replace it with the character sequence\'
.
If that's the case (you just want to escape single quotes), you can use:
pax$ echo "test ' this" | sed "s/'/\\\'/g"
test \' this
By using double quotes around the sed
command, you remove the need to worry about embedded single quotes. You do have to then worry about escaping since the shell will absorb one level of escapes so that sed
will see:
s/'/\'/g
which will convert '
into \'
as desired.
If you want a way to escape both single and double quotes with a single sed
, it's probably easiest to provide multiple commands to sed
so you can use the alternate quotes:
pax$ echo "Single '" 'and double "'
Single ' and double "
pax$ echo "Single '" 'and double "' | sed -e "s/'/\\\'/g" -e 's/"/\\"/g'
Single \' and double \"
If I've misunderstood your requirements, a few examples might help.
[dod@MBP-13~] echo "test me this" | sed "s/me/\\\'/"
test \' this
Nov 3, 2011 at 6:38
me
, they now want to do it to get \'
(and for double quotes as well). Updated to (hopefully) answer that.
Nov 3, 2011 at 7:00
sed
, the best thing to do is just sed -f mysedfile.sed
, and avoid the double-or-triple-escaping game entirely. This also opens the option of syntax-highlighting in your text-editor of choice.
Feb 4, 2016 at 0:44
I have some doubts about your question, but anyway maybe my solution is useful for anyone.
Let's me say before all :
\\ that's mean one \ because when you put two together you are cancelling its meaning as metacharacter. And \x27 as single quote, at least for me is easier than working with single a double ...
Finally I put
echo "test me this" | sed 's/me/\\\x27/g'
so here you have test me ==> test \' this
echo "test \' this" | sed 's/\\\x27/me/g'
and here is the opposite.
Is this what you mean?:
# cat <<! | sed 's/["'"'"']/\\&/g'
> quote '
> double quotes "
> quote ' double quotes "
> !
quote \'
double quotes \"
quote \' double quotes \"
Or this:
# echo "test me test"|sed 's/me/\\'"'"'/g'
test \' test
# echo "test me test"|sed 's/me/\\"/g'
test \" test
I find it best to always single quote sed/awk/perl... commands on the command line and make "holes" for double quote parameters used within them.
I needed to use ' in a script to create a dnsmasq config file, this is the technique I used:
echo -e "\toption name *$name*"|sed s/*/\'/g
example output
option name 'GarageDoor'