Issue
Is it possible to encapsulate the following pseudocode using sed?
for line in lines:
if line == "foo":
print "FOO"
else:
print "- " + line
Here's the first thing I tried:
> echo 'foo
> bar
> baz' | sed -e 's/^foo$/FOO/' -e 's/^/- /'
- FOO
- bar
- baz
This is incorrect since both substitutions are applied to the first line.
Is it possible to tell sed to perform a maximum of one substitution per line?
Solution
You can limit what lines a substitution affects, by prefixing it with a pattern:
sed -e '/^foo$/! s/^/- /' -e '/^foo$/ s//FOO/' infile
A better alternative is to use the t
branch command which will go to the next line if the previous substitution succeeded:
sed 's/^foo$/FOO/; t; s/^/- /' infile
Or the more portable:
sed -e 's/^foo$/FOO/' -e t -e 's/^/- /' infile
Output in both cases:
FOO
- bar
- baz
Answered By - Thor Answer Checked By - Pedro (WPSolving Volunteer)