I want add a comma at the end of every line of this kind of file except the last line:
I have this now:
{...}
{...}
{...}
{...}
I want this:
{...},
{...},
{...},
{...}
How can I do it with the command line? Is it possible with sed command?
Keep it simple, just use awk:
The following
sed
script has an address expression$!
which matches lines which are not the last, and a substituton actions/$/,/
which adds a comma next to the end of line.(The
$
in the address refers to the last line while the$
in the regular expression in the substitution refers to the last character position on every line. They are unrelated, though in some sense similar.)This prints the modified contents of
file
to standard output; redirect to a different file to save them to a file, or usesed -i
if yoursed
supports that. (Some variants require an empty argument to the-i
option, notably *BSD / OSXsed
.)If your task is to generate valid JSON from something which is not, I'm skeptical of this approach. Structured formats should be manipulated with tools which understand structured formats, not basic line-oriented tools; but if this helps you transform line-oriented data towards proper JSON, that's probably a valid use.
... As an afterthought, maybe you want to wrap the output in a set of square brackets, too. Then it's actually technically valid JSON (assuming each line is a valid JSON fragment on its own).
On the first line (address expression
1
) substitute in an opening square bracket at beginning of line (s/^/[/
). On lines which are not the last, add a trailing comma, as above. On the line which is the last (address expression$
) add a closing square bracket at the end of line (s/$/]/
). If you prefer newlines to semicolons, that's fine; manysed
dialects also allow you to split this into multiple-e
arguments.You can use something like this:
This will substitute the end of the line with a ',' and write it to file_with_added_commas.txt
For more information refer to: add text at the end of each line