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Instead of informing the bell character (hex 07), the example was using an escaped \ followed by x07. $ echo \\x07 \x07 $ echo \x07 $ echo \x07 | od -a 0000000 bel nl 0000002 $ * docs: Use \u instead of \\u Instead of informing the Unicode character 慡, this example was using an escaped \ followed by u6161. $ echo \\u6161 \u6161 $ echo \u6161 慡 Before: $ string escape --style=var 'a1 b2'\\u6161 | string unescape --style=var a1 b2\u6161 Now: $ string escape --style=var 'a1 b2'\u6161 | string unescape --style=var a1 b2慡
67 lines
1.8 KiB
ReStructuredText
67 lines
1.8 KiB
ReStructuredText
string-replace - replace substrings
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===================================
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Synopsis
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--------
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.. BEGIN SYNOPSIS
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::
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string replace [(-a | --all)] [(-f | --filter)] [(-i | --ignore-case)] [(-r | --regex)] [(-q | --quiet)] PATTERN REPLACEMENT [STRING...]
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.. END SYNOPSIS
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Description
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-----------
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.. BEGIN DESCRIPTION
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``string replace`` is similar to ``string match`` but replaces non-overlapping matching substrings with a replacement string and prints the result. By default, PATTERN is treated as a literal substring to be matched.
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If ``-r`` or ``--regex`` is given, PATTERN is interpreted as a Perl-compatible regular expression, and REPLACEMENT can contain C-style escape sequences like ``\t`` as well as references to capturing groups by number or name as ``$n`` or ``${n}``.
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If you specify the ``-f`` or ``--filter`` flag then each input string is printed only if a replacement was done. This is useful where you would otherwise use this idiom: ``a_cmd | string match pattern | string replace pattern new_pattern``. You can instead just write ``a_cmd | string replace --filter pattern new_pattern``.
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Exit status: 0 if at least one replacement was performed, or 1 otherwise.
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.. END DESCRIPTION
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Examples
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--------
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.. BEGIN EXAMPLES
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Replace Literal Examples
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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::
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>_ string replace is was 'blue is my favorite'
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blue was my favorite
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>_ string replace 3rd last 1st 2nd 3rd
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1st
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2nd
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last
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>_ string replace -a ' ' _ 'spaces to underscores'
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spaces_to_underscores
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Replace Regex Examples
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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::
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>_ string replace -r -a '[^\d.]+' ' ' '0 one two 3.14 four 5x'
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0 3.14 5
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>_ string replace -r '(\w+)\s+(\w+)' '$2 $1 $$' 'left right'
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right left $
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>_ string replace -r '\s*newline\s*' '\n' 'put a newline here'
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put a
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here
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.. END EXAMPLES
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