Consider the input:
=sec1=
some-line
some-other-line
foo
bar=baz
=sec2=
c=baz
If I wish to process only =sec1= I can for example comment out the section by:
sed -e '/=sec1=/,/=[a-z]*=/s:^:#:' < input
... well, almost.
This will comment the lines including "=sec1=" and "=sec2=" lines, and the result will be something like:
#=sec1=
#some-line
#some-other-line
#
#foo
#bar=baz
#
#=sec2=
c=baz
My question is: What is the easiest way to exclude the start and end lines from a /START/,/END/ range in sed?
I know that for many cases refinement of the "s:::" claws can give solution in this specific case, but I am after the generic solution here.
In "Sed - An Introduction and Tutorial" Bruce Barnett writes: "I will show you later how to restrict a command up to, but not including the line containing the specified pattern.", but I was not able to find where he actually show this.
In the "USEFUL ONE-LINE SCRIPTS FOR SED" Compiled by Eric Pement, I could find only the inclusive example:
# print section of file between two regular expressions (inclusive)
sed -n '/Iowa/,/Montana/p' # case sensitive
This should do the trick:
sed -e '/=sec1=/,/=sec2=/ { /=sec1=/b; /=sec2=/b; s/^/#/ }' < input
This matches between sec1 and sec2 inclusively and then just skips the first and last line with the b
command. This leaves the desired lines between sec1 and sec2 (exclusive), and the s
command adds the comment sign.
Unfortunately, you do need to repeat the regexps for matching the delimiters. As far as I know there's no better way to do this. At least you can keep the regexps clean, even though they're used twice.
This is adapted from the SED FAQ: How do I address all the lines between RE1 and RE2, excluding the lines themselves?
If you're not interested in lines outside of the range, but just want the non-inclusive variant of the Iowa/Montana example from the question (which is what brought me here), you can write the "except for the first and last matching lines" clause easily enough with a second sed:
sed -n '/PATTERN1/,/PATTERN2/p' < input | sed '1d;$d'
Personally, I find this slightly clearer (albeit slower on large files) than the equivalent
sed -n '1,/PATTERN1/d;/PATTERN2/q;p' < input
Another way would be
sed '/begin/,/end/ {
/begin/n
/end/ !p
}'
/begin/n
-> skip over the line that has the "begin" pattern
/end/ !p
-> print all lines that don't have the "end" pattern
Taken from Bruce Barnett's sed tutorial http://www.grymoire.com/Unix/Sed.html#toc-uh-35a
you could also use awk
awk '/sec1/{f=1;print;next}f && !/sec2/{ $0="#"$0}/sec2/{f=0}1' file
I've used:
sed '/begin/,/end/{/begin\|end/!p}'
This will search all the lines between the patterns, then print everything not containing the patterns