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NAME

       ed, red - text editor

SYNOPSIS

       ed [-GVhs] [-p string] [file]

       red [-GVhs] [-p string] [file]

DESCRIPTION

       ed  is  a  line-oriented  text  editor.  It is used to create, display,
       modify and otherwise manipulate text files.  red is a restricted ed: it
       can  only  edit files in the current directory and cannot execute shell
       commands.

       If invoked with a file argument, then a copy of file is read  into  the
       editor’s  buffer.   Changes  are  made to this copy and not directly to
       file itself.  Upon quitting ed, any changes not explicitly saved   with
       a w command are lost.

       Editing  is  done in two distinct modes: command and input.  When first
       invoked, ed is in command mode.  In this mode commands  are  read  from
       the  standard  input  and  executed  to  manipulate the contents of the
       editor buffer.  A typical command might look like:

              ,s/old/new/g

       which replaces all occurrences of the string old with new.

       When an input command, such  as  a  (append),  i  (insert)  or  c
       (change), is given, ed enters input mode.  This is the primary means of
       adding text to a file.   In  this  mode,  no  commands  are  available;
       instead,  the  standard input is written directly to the editor buffer.
       Lines consist of text up to and including a newline  character.   Input
       mode is terminated by entering a single period  (.) on a line.

       All  ed  commands  operate on whole lines or ranges of lines; e.g., the
       d command deletes lines; the m command moves lines, and so on.   It
       is possible to modify only a portion of a line by means of replacement,
       as in the example above.  However even here, the s command is applied
       to whole lines at a time.

       In  general,  ed  commands  consist  of  zero  or  more line addresses,
       followed  by  a  single  character  command  and  possibly   additional
       parameters; i.e., commands have the structure:

              [address [,address]]command[parameters]

       The  address(es)  indicate the line or range of lines to be affected by
       the command.  If fewer addresses are given than  the  command  accepts,
       then default addresses are supplied.

   OPTIONS
       -G      Forces backwards compatibility.  Affects the commands G, V,
               f, l, m, t, and !!.

       -s      Suppresses diagnostics. This should be used  if  ed’s  standard
               input is from a script.

       -p string
               Specifies  a  command  prompt.   This may be toggled on and off
               with the P command.

       file    Specifies the name of a file to read.  If file is prefixed with
               a bang (!), then it is interpreted as a shell command.  In this
               case, what is read is the standard output of file executed  via
               sh(1).   To  read  a file whose name begins with a bang, prefix
               the name with a backslash (\).  The default filename is set  to
               file only if it is not prefixed with a bang.

   LINE ADDRESSING
       An address represents the number of a line in the buffer.  ed maintains
       a current address which  is  typically  supplied  to  commands  as  the
       default  address  when  none  is specified.  When a file is first read,
       the current address is set to the last line of the file.   In  general,
       the current address is set to the last line affected by a command.

       A  line address is constructed from one of the bases in the list below,
       optionally followed by a numeric offset.  The offset  may  include  any
       combination  of  digits,  operators  (i.e.   +  and  -) and whitespace.
       Addresses are read from left to right, and their  values  are  computed
       relative to the current address.

       One  exception to the rule that addresses represent line numbers is the
       address 0 (zero).  This means "before the first  line,"  and  is  legal
       wherever it makes sense.

       An  address  range  is  two  addresses  separated  either by a comma or
       semicolon. The value of the first address in a range cannot exceed  the
       value of the second.  If only one address is given in a range, then the
       second address is set to the given address.  If an n-tuple of addresses
       is given where n > 2, then the corresponding range is determined by the
       last two addresses in the n-tuple.  If only one  address  is  expected,
       then the last address is used.

       Each  address in a comma-delimited range is interpreted relative to the
       current address.  In a semicolon-delimited range, the first address  is
       used  to set the current address, and the second address is interpreted
       relative to the first.

       The following address symbols are recognized.

       .       The current line (address) in the buffer.

       $       The last line in the buffer.

       n       The nth, line in the buffer where n is a number  in  the  range
               [0,$].

       -       The  previous  line.   This  is  equivalent  to  -1  and may be
               repeated with cumulative effect.

       ^n      The nth previous line, where n is a non-negative number.

       +       The next line.  This is equivalent to +1 and  may  be  repeated
               with cumulative effect.

       whitespace n

       +n      The   nth   next  line,  where  n  is  a  non-negative  number.
               Whitespace followed by a number n is interpreted as +n.

       ,       The first through last lines in the buffer.  This is equivalent
               to the address range 1,$.

       ;       The  current  through  last  lines  in  the  buffer.   This  is
               equivalent to the address range .,$.

       /re/    The next line containing the regular expression re.  The search
               wraps  to the beginning of the buffer and continues down to the
               current line, if necessary.  // repeats the last search.

       ?re?    The previous line containing the regular  expression  re.   The
               search  wraps  to the end of the buffer and continues up to the
               current line, if necessary.  ?? repeats the last search.

       ’lc     The line previously marked by a k (mark) command, where lc is
               a lower case letter.

   REGULAR EXPRESSIONS
       Regular  expressions are patterns used in selecting text.  For example,
       the ed command

              g/string/

       prints all lines containing string.  Regular expressions are also  used
       by the s command for selecting old text to be replaced with new.

       In  addition  to  a specifying string literals, regular expressions can
       represent classes of strings.  Strings thus represented are said to  be
       matched by the corresponding regular expression.  If it is possible for
       a regular expression to match several strings in a line, then the left-
       most longest match is the one selected.

       The following symbols are used in constructing regular expressions:

       c       Any character c not listed below, including ‘{’, ’}’, ‘(’, ‘)’,
               ‘<’ and ‘>’, matches itself.

       \c      A backslash-escaped character c other than ‘{’, ’}’, ‘(’,  ‘)’,
               ‘<’, ‘>’, ‘b’, ’B’, ‘w’, ‘W’, ‘+’, and ‘?’  matches itself.

       .       Matches any single character.

       [char-class]
               Matches  any single character in char-class.  To include a  ‘]’
               in char-class, it must be the  first  character.   A  range  of
               characters may be specified by separating the end characters of
               the range with a ‘-’, e.g.,  ‘a-z’  specifies  the  lower  case
               characters.  The following literal expressions can also be used
               in char-class to specify sets of characters:

                 [:alnum:]  [:cntrl:]  [:lower:]  [:space:]
                 [:alpha:]  [:digit:]  [:print:]  [:upper:]
                 [:blank:]  [:graph:]  [:punct:]  [:xdigit:]

               If ‘-’ appears as the first or last  character  of  char-class,
               then  it  matches  itself.   All other characters in char-class
               match themselves.

               Patterns in char-class of the form:

                 [.col-elm.] or,   [=col-elm=]

               where col-elm is a collating element are interpreted  according
               to  locale(5)  (not  currently supported).  See regex(3) for an
               explanation of these constructs.

       [^char-class]
               Matches any single character, other than newline, not in  char-
               class.  char-class is defined as above.

       ^       If  ‘^’ is the first character of a regular expression, then it
               anchors the regular expression to  the  beginning  of  a  line.
               Otherwise, it matches itself.

       $       If  ‘$’  is  the  last  character  of  a regular expression, it
               anchors  the  regular  expression  to  the  end  of   a   line.
               Otherwise, it matches itself.

       \(re\)  Defines a (possibly null) subexpression re.  Subexpressions may
               be nested.  A subsequent backreference of the form ‘\n’,  where
               n  is  a number in the range [1,9], expands to the text matched
               by the nth subexpression.  For example, the regular  expression
               ‘\(a.c\)\1’  matches  the  string  ‘abcabc’,  but not ‘abcadc’.
               Subexpressions are ordered relative to their left delimiter.

       *       Matches   the   single   character   regular   expression    or
               subexpression  immediately preceding it zero or more times.  If
               ’*’  is  the  first  character  of  a  regular  expression   or
               subexpression,  then  it  matches  itself.   The  ‘*’  operator
               sometimes yields unexpected results.  For example, the  regular
               expression  ‘b*’ matches the beginning of the string ‘abbb’, as
               opposed to the substring ‘bbb’, since a null match is the  only
               left-most match.

       \{n,m\}
       \{n,\}
       \{n\}   Matches    the   single   character   regular   expression   or
               subexpression immediately preceding it at least n and at most m
               times.   If m is omitted, then it matches at least n times.  If
               the comma is also omitted, then it matches exactly n times.  If
               any  of  these  forms  occurs  first in a regular expression or
               subexpression, then it  is  interpreted  literally  (i.e.,  the
               regular  expression  ‘\{2\}’  matches  the string ‘{2}’, and so
               on).

       \<
       \>      Anchors   the   single   character   regular   expression    or
               subexpression immediately following it to the beginning (\<) or
               ending (\>) of a word, i.e., in  ASCII,  a  maximal  string  of
               alphanumeric characters, including the underscore (_).

       The  following  extended  operators  are preceded by a backslash (\) to
       distinguish them from traditional ed syntax.

       \`
       \´      Unconditionally matches the beginning (\`) or ending (\´) of  a
               line.

       \?      Optionally  matches  the single character regular expression or
               subexpression  immediately  preceding  it.   For  example,  the
               regular  expression ‘a[bd]\?c’ matches the strings ‘abc’, ‘adc’
               and  ‘ac’.   If  \?  occurs  at  the  beginning  of  a  regular
               expressions or subexpression, then it matches a literal ‘?’.

       \+      Matches    the   single   character   regular   expression   or
               subexpression immediately preceding it one or more  times.   So
               the  regular  expression  ‘a\+’  is shorthand for ‘aa*’.  If \+
               occurs  at  the  beginning   of   a   regular   expression   or
               subexpression, then it matches a literal ‘+’.

       \b      Matches  the beginning or ending (null string) of a word.  Thus
               the   regular   expression   ‘\bhello\b’   is   equivalent   to
               ‘\<hello\>’.   However,  ‘\b\b’  is  a valid regular expression
               whereas ‘\<\>’ is not.

       \B      Matches (a null string) inside a word.

       \w      Matches any character in a word.

       \W      Matches any character not in a word.

   COMMANDS
       All ed commands are single characters, though some  require  additional
       parameters.   If a command’s parameters extend over several lines, then
       each line except for the last must be terminated with a backslash  (\).

       In  general,  at  most  one command is allowed per line.  However, most
       commands accept a print suffix, which is any of p (print), l (list)
       , or n (enumerate), to print the last line affected by the command.

       An  interrupt  (typically  ^C)  has  the effect of aborting the current
       command and returning the editor to command mode.

       ed recognizes the following commands.  The commands are shown  together
       with the default address or address range supplied if none is specified
       (in parenthesis).

       (.)a    Appends text to the buffer after the addressed line, which  may
               be  the  address 0 (zero).  Text is entered in input mode.  The
               current address is set to last line entered.

       (.,.)c  Changes lines in the buffer.  The addressed lines  are  deleted
               from  the buffer, and text is appended in their place.  Text is
               entered in input mode.  The current address is set to last line
               entered.

       (.,.)d  Deletes  the  addressed  lines  from the buffer.  If there is a
               line after the deleted range, then the current address  is  set
               to  this line. Otherwise the current address is set to the line
               before the deleted range.

       e file  Edits file, and sets the default  filename.   If  file  is  not
               specified,  then  the   default filename is used.  Any lines in
               the buffer are deleted  before  the  new  file  is  read.   The
               current address is set to the last line read.

       e !command
               Edits  the standard output of !command, (see !command below).
               The default filename is unchanged.  Any lines in the buffer are
               deleted  before  the  output  of  command is read.  The current
               address is set to the last line read.

       E file  Edits file unconditionally.  This is similar to the e  command,
               except  that  unwritten  changes are discarded without warning.
               The current address is set to the last line read.

       f file  Sets the default filename to file.  If file is  not  specified,
               then the default unescaped filename is printed.

       (1,$)g/re/command-list
               Applies  command-list to each of the addressed lines matching a
               regular expression re.  The current address is set to the  line
               currently  matched before command-list is executed.  At the end
               of the g command, the current address is set to the last line
               affected by command-list.

               Each  command  in  command-list must be on a separate line, and
               every line  except  for  the  last  must  be  terminated  by  a
               backslash  (\).  Any commands are allowed, except for g, G,
               v, and V.  A newline alone in command-list is equivalent to
               a p command.

       (1,$)G/re/
               Interactively  edits  the  addressed  lines  matching a regular
               expression re.  For each matching line, the  line  is  printed,
               the current address is set, and the user is prompted to enter a
               command-list.  At the end  of  the  G  command,  the  current
               address is set to the last line affected by (the last) command-
               list.

               The format of command-list is the  same  as  that  of  the  g
               command.   A  newline  alone  acts  as  a null command list.  A
               single ‘&’ repeats the last non-null command list.

       H       Toggles  the  printing  of  error  explanations.   By  default,
               explanations  are  not  printed.   It  is  recommended  that ed
               scripts begin with this command to aid in debugging.

       h       Prints an explanation of the last error.

       (.)i    Inserts text in the buffer before the current  line.   Text  is
               entered  in input mode.  The current address is set to the last
               line entered.

       (.,.+1)j
               Joins the addressed lines.  The  addressed  lines  are  deleted
               from  the buffer and replaced by a single line containing their
               joined text.  The current address is set to the resultant line.

       (.)klc  Marks  a  line with a lower case letter lc.  The  line can then
               be addressed as lc (i.e., a single quote followed by lc  )  in
               subsequent commands.  The mark is not cleared until the line is
               deleted or otherwise modified.

       (.,.)l  Prints the addressed lines unambiguously.  If  invoked  from  a
               terminal,  ed pauses at the end of each page until a newline is
               entered.  The current address is set to the last line  printed.

       (.,.)m(.)
               Moves  lines  in  the buffer.  The addressed lines are moved to
               after the right-hand destination  address,  which  may  be  the
               address  0  (zero).   The  current  address  is  set to the new
               address of the last line moved.

       (.,.)n  Prints the addressed lines along with their line numbers.   The
               current address is set to the last line printed.

       (.,.)p  Prints  the  addressed lines.    If invoked from a terminal, ed
               pauses at the end of each page until a newline is entered.  The
               current address is set to the last line printed.

       P       Toggles  the  command  prompt  on and off.  Unless a prompt was
               specified by with command-line option -p  string,  the  command
               prompt is by default turned off.

       q       Quits ed.

       Q       Quits  ed  unconditionally.   This is similar to the q command,
               except that unwritten changes are discarded without warning.

       ($)r file
               Reads file to  after  the  addressed  line.   If  file  is  not
               specified,  then the default filename is used.  If there was no
               default  filename  prior  to  the  command,  then  the  default
               filename  is  set  to file.  Otherwise, the default filename is
               unchanged.  The current address is set to the last line read.

       ($)r !command
               Reads to after  the  addressed  line  the  standard  output  of
               !command,  (see the !command below).  The default filename is
               unchanged.  The current address is set to the last line read.

       (.,.)s/re/replacement/
       (.,.)s/re/replacement/g
       (.,.)s/re/replacement/n
               Replaces  text  in  the  addressed  lines  matching  a  regular
               expression  re  with  replacement.   By default, only the first
               match in each line is replaced.  If the g (global) suffix  is
               given,  then every match to be replaced.  The n suffix, where
               n is a positive  number,  causes  only  the  nth  match  to  be
               replaced.   It is an error if no substitutions are performed on
               any of the addressed lines.  The current address is set to  the
               last line affected.

               re and replacement may be delimited by any character other than
               space, newline and the characters used by the form of  the  s
               command  shown  below.  If one or two of the last delimiters is
               omitted, then the last line affected is printed as  though  the
               print suffix p were specified.

               An  unescaped  ‘&’  in replacement is replaced by the currently
               matched text.  The character sequence \m, where m is a number
               in  the  range  [1,9],  is  replaced  by  the mth backreference
               expression of the matched text.  If replacement consists  of  a
               single  ‘%’,  then  replacement  from  the last substitution is
               used.  Newlines may be embedded  in  replacement  if  they  are
               escaped with a backslash (\).

       (.,.)s  Repeats  the  last  substitution.  This form of the s command
               accepts  a  count  suffix  n,  and  any  combination  of  the
               characters  r, g, and p.  If a count suffix n is given,
               then only the nth match is replaced.  The r suffix causes the
               regular expression of the last search to be used instead of the
               that of the last substitution.   The  g  suffix  toggles  the
               global suffix of the last substitution.  The p suffix toggles
               the print suffix of the last substitution.  The current address
               is set to the last line affected.

       (.,.)t(.)
               Copies  (i.e.,  transfers)  the  addressed  lines  to after the
               right-hand destination address, which  may  be  the  address  0
               (zero).  The current address is set to the last line copied.

       u       Undoes  the  last  command  and restores the current address to
               what it was before the command.  The global commands g,  G,
               v, and V.  are treated as a single command by undo.  u is
               its own inverse.

       (1,$)v/re/command-list
               Applies  command-list  to  each  of  the  addressed  lines  not
               matching  a  regular expression re.  This is similar to the g
               command.

       (1,$)V/re/
               Interactively edits the addressed lines not matching a  regular
               expression re.  This is similar to the G command.

       (1,$)w file
               Writes  the  addressed lines to file.  Any previous contents of
               file is lost without warning.  If there is no default filename,
               then  the  default  filename  is  set  to file, otherwise it is
               unchanged.  If no  filename  is  specified,  then  the  default
               filename is used.  The current address is unchanged.

       (1,$)wq file
               Writes  the  addressed  lines  to file, and then executes a q
               command.

       (1,$)w !command
               Writes the addressed lines to the standard input of !command,
               (see  the  !command  below).   The default filename and current
               address are unchanged.

       (1,$)W file
               Appends the addressed lines  to  the  end  of  file.   This  is
               similar  to  the w command, expect that the previous contents
               of file is not clobbered.  The current address is unchanged.

       (.)x    Copies (puts) the contents of  the  cut  buffer  to  after  the
               addressed  line.   The  current address is set to the last line
               copied.

       (.,.)y  Copies (yanks) the addressed lines to the cut buffer.  The  cut
               buffer  is overwritten by subsequent y, s, j, d, or c
               commands.  The current address is unchanged.

       (.+1)zn Scrolls n lines at a time starting at addressed line.  If n  is
               not  specified,  then  the  current  window  size is used.  The
               current address is set to the last line printed.

       !command
               Executes command via sh(1).  If the first character of  command
               is ‘!’, then it is replaced by text of the previous !command.
               ed  does  not  process  command  for  backslash  (\)   escapes.
               However,  an unescaped % is replaced by the default filename.
               When the shell returns from execution, a ‘!’  is printed to the
               standard output.  The current line is unchanged.

       (.,.)#  Begins  a  comment;   the rest of the line, up to a newline, is
               ignored.  If a line address followed by a semicolon  is  given,
               then  the  current  address is set to that address.  Otherwise,
               the current address is unchanged.

       ($)=    Prints the line number of the addressed line.

       (.+1)newline
               Prints the addressed line, and sets the current address to that
               line.

FILES

       ed.hup  The  file  to  which  ed  attempts  to write the  buffer if the
               terminal hangs up.

SEE ALSO

       vi(1), sed(1), regex(3), sh(1).

       USD:12-13

       B. W. Kernighan and P. J. Plauger, Software Tools in Pascal ,  Addison-
       Wesley, 1981.

LIMITATIONS

       ed  processes  file  arguments  for  backslash  escapes,  i.e.,   in  a
       filename, any characters preceded by a backslash  (\)  are  interpreted
       literally.

       If  a  text (non-binary) file is not terminated by a newline character,
       then ed appends one on reading/writing it.  In the  case  of  a  binary
       file, ed does not append a newline on reading/writing.

       per line overhead: 4 ints

DIAGNOSTICS

       When  an  error  occurs,  if  ed’s input is from a regular file or here
       document, then it exits, otherwise it  prints  a  ‘?’  and  returns  to
       command mode.  An explanation of the last error can be printed with the
       h (help) command.

       Attempting to quit ed or edit another file before  writing  a  modified
       buffer  results  in an error.  If the command is entered a second time,
       it succeeds, but any changes to the buffer are lost.

       ed exits with 0 if no errors occurred; otherwise >0.

                                 13 June 2009