n00b programmer
n00b programmer

Reputation: 2701

how to use sed from a tcl file

I'm trying to use the Unix "sed" command form within a tcl file, like this: (to change multiple spaces to one space)

exec /bin/sed 's/ \+/ /g' $file

I also tried exec /bin/sed 's/ \\+/ /g' $file (an extra backslash)

none of the version work, and I get the error

/bin/sed: -e expression #1, char 1: Unknown command: `''

The command works fine when run from a linux terminal

What am I doing wrong?

Upvotes: 10

Views: 25094

Answers (2)

Donal Fellows
Donal Fellows

Reputation: 137667

What am I doing wrong?

What you're doing wrong is using ' (single quote) characters. They're not special to Tcl at all. The equivalent in Tcl is enclosing a word in {braces}; it gives no special treatment at all to the characters inside. Thus, what you seek to do would be:

exec /bin/sed {s/ +/ /g} $file

Mind you, if you're doing something more complex and the restriction of Tcl to whole-words being unquoted, then you might instead go for this:

exec /bin/sh -c "sed 's/ +/ /g' $file"

Or, real idiomatic Tcl just doesn't use sed for something this simple:

set f [open $file]
set replacedContents [regsub -all { +} [read $f] " "]
close $f

Upvotes: 27

Carlos Tasada
Carlos Tasada

Reputation: 4444

Use exec /bin/sed "s/\ +/\ /g" $file

The '\ ' tells TCL that there's an space there. Also using the '"' configures properly the string.

Upvotes: 1

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