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ED(C)



     ED(C)                    XENIX System V                     ED(C)



     Name
          ed - Invokes the text editor.

     Syntax
          ed [ - ] [ -p string ] [ file ]

     Description
          ed is the standard text editor.  If the file argument is
          given, ed simulates an e command (see below) on the named
          file; that is to say, the file is read into ed's buffer so
          that it can be edited.  ed operates on a copy of the file it
          is editing; changes made to the copy have no effect on the
          file until a w (write) command is given.  The copy of the
          text being edited resides in a temporary file called the
          buffer.  There is only one buffer.

          The options are:

          -    Suppresses the printing of character counts by the e,
               r, and w commands, of diagnostics from e and q
               commands, and the ! prompt after a !shell command.

          -p   Allows the user to specify a prompt string.

          ed supports formatting capability.  After including a format
          specification as the first line of file and invoking ed with
          your terminal in stty -tabs or stty tab3 mode (see stty(C),
          the specified tab stops will automatically be used when
          scanning file.  For example, if the first line of a file
          contained:

               <:t5,10,15 s72:>

          tab stops would be set at columns 5, 10, and 15, and a
          maximum line length of 72 would be imposed.  NOTE: While
          inputting text, tab characters are expanded to every eighth
          column as the default.

          Commands to ed have a simple and regular structure: zero,
          one, or two addresses followed by a single-character
          command, possibly followed by parameters to that command.
          These addresses specify one or more lines in the buffer.
          Every command that requires addresses has default addresses,
          so that the addresses can very often be omitted.

          In general, only one command may appear on a line.  Certain
          commands allow the input of text.  This text is placed in
          the appropriate place in the buffer.  While ed is accepting
          text, it is said to be in input mode.  In this mode, no
          commands are recognized; all input is merely collected.
          Input mode is left by entering a period (.) alone at the
          beginning of a line.



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          ed supports a limited form of regular expression notation;
          regular expressions are used in addresses to specify lines
          and in some commands (e.g., s) to specify portions of a line
          that are to be substituted.  A regular expression specifies
          a set of character strings.  A member of this set of strings
          is said to be matched by the regular expression.  The
          regular expressions allowed by ed are constructed as
          follows:

          The following one-character regular expressions match a
          single character:

          1.1    An ordinary character (not one of those discussed in
                 1.2 below) is a one-character regular expression that
                 matches itself.

          1.2    A backslash (\) followed by any special character is
                 a one-character regular expression that matches the
                 special character itself.  The special characters
                 are:

                 a.    ., *, [, and \ (dot, star, left square bracket,
                       and backslash, respectively), which are always
                       special, except when they appear within square
                       brackets ([]; see 1.4 below).

                 b.    ^ (caret), which is special at the beginning of
                       an entire regular expression (see 3.1 and 3.2
                       below), or when it immediately follows the left
                       of a pair of square brackets ([]) (see 1.4
                       below).

                 c.    $ (dollar sign), which is special at the end of
                       an entire regular expression (see 3.2 below).

                 d.    The character used to bound (i.e., delimit) an
                       entire regular expression, which is special for
                       that regular expression (for example, see how
                       slash (/) is used in the g command below).

          1.3    A period (.) is a one-character regular expression
                 that matches any character except newline.

          1.4    A nonempty string of characters enclosed in square
                 brackets ([]) is a one-character regular expression
                 that matches any one character in that string.  If,
                 however, the first character of the string is a caret
                 (^), the one-character regular expression matches any
                 character except newline and the remaining characters
                 in the string.  The star (*) has this special meaning
                 only if it occurs first in the string.  The dash (-)
                 may be used to indicate a range of consecutive ASCII



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                 characters; for example, [0-9] is equivalent to
                 [0123456789].  The dash (-) loses this special
                 meaning if it occurs first (after an initial caret
                 (^), if any) or last in the string.  The right square
                 bracket (]) does not terminate such a string when it
                 is the first character within it (after an initial
                 caret (^), if any); e.g., []a-f] matches either a
                 right square bracket (]) or one of the letters ``a''
                 through ``f'' inclusive.  Dot, star, left bracket,
                 and the backslash lose their special meaning within
                 such a string of characters.

          The following rules may be used to construct regular
          expressions from one-character regular expressions:

          2.1    A one-character regular expression matches whatever
                 the one-character regular expression matches.

          2.2    A one-character regular expression followed by a star
                 (*) is a regular expression that matches zero or more
                 occurrences of the one-character regular expression.
                 If there is any choice, the longest leftmost string
                 that permits a match is chosen.

          2.3    A one-character regular expression followed by \{m\},
                 \{m,\}, or \{m,n\} is a regular expression that
                 matches a range of occurrences of the one-character
                 regular expression.  The values of m and n must be
                 nonnegative integers less than 255; \{m\} matches
                 exactly m occurrences; \{m,\} matches at least m
                 occurrences; \{m,n\} matches any number of
                 occurrences between m and n, inclusive.  Whenever a
                 choice exists, the regular expression matches as many
                 occurrences as possible.

          2.4    The concatenation of regular expressions is a regular
                 expression that matches the concatenation of the
                 strings matched by each component of the regular
                 expression.

          2.5    A regular expression enclosed between the character
                 sequences \( and \) is a regular expression that
                 matches whatever the unadorned regular expression
                 matches.  See 2.6 below for a discussion of why this
                 is useful.

          2.6    The expression \n matches the same string of
                 characters as was matched by an expression enclosed
                 between \( and \) earlier in the same regular
                 expression.  Here n is a digit; the subexpression
                 specified is that beginning with the n-th occurrence
                 of \( counting from the left.  For example, the



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     ED(C)                    XENIX System V                     ED(C)



                 expression ^\(.*\)\1$ matches a line consisting of
                 two repeated appearances of the same string.

          Finally, an entire regular expression may be constrained to
          match only an initial segment or final segment of a line (or
          both):

          3.1    A caret (^) at the beginning of an entire regular
                 expression constrains that regular expression to
                 match an initial segment of a line.

          3.2    A dollar sign ($) at the end of an entire regular
                 expression constrains that regular expression to
                 match a final segment of a line.  The construction
                 ^entire regular expression$ constrains the entire
                 regular expression to match the entire line.

          The null regular expression (e.g., //) is equivalent to the
          last regular expression encountered.

          To understand addressing in ed , it is necessary to know
          that there is a current line at all times. Generally
          speaking, the current line is the last line affected by a
          command; the exact effect on the current line is discussed
          under the description of each command.  Addresses are
          constructed as follows:

           1.    The character . addresses the current line.

           2.    The character $ addresses the last line of the
                 buffer.

           3.    A decimal number n addresses the n-th line of the
                 buffer.

           4.    'x addresses the line marked with the mark name
                 character x, which must be a lowercase letter.  Lines
                 are marked with the k command described below.

           5.    A regular expression enclosed by slashes (/)
                 addresses the first line found by searching forward
                 from the line following the current line toward the
                 end of the buffer and stopping at the first line
                 containing a string matching the regular expression.
                 If necessary, the search wraps around to the
                 beginning of the buffer and continues up to and
                 including the current line, so that the entire buffer
                 is searched.

           6.    A regular expression enclosed in question marks (?)
                 addresses the first line found by searching backward
                 from the line preceding the current line toward the



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                 beginning of the buffer and stopping at the first
                 line containing a string matching the regular
                 expression.  If necessary, the search wraps around to
                 the end of the buffer and continues up to and
                 including the current line.  See also the last
                 paragraph before Files below.

           7.    An address followed by a plus sign (+) or a minus
                 sign (-) followed by a decimal number specifies that
                 address plus or minus the indicated number of lines.
                 The plus sign may be omitted.

           8.    If an address begins with + or -, the addition or
                 subtraction is taken with respect to the current
                 line; e.g, -5 is understood to mean .-5.

           9.    If an address ends with + or -, then 1 is added to or
                 subtracted from the address, respectively.  As a
                 consequence of this rule and of rule 8 immediately
                 above, the address - refers to the line preceding the
                 current line.  (To maintain compatibility with
                 earlier versions of the editor, the character ^ in
                 addresses is entirely equivalent to -.) Moreover,
                 trailing + and - characters have a cumulative effect,
                 so -- refers to the current line less 2.

          10.    For convenience, a comma (,) stands for the address
                 pair 1,$, while a semicolon (;) stands for the pair
                 .,$.

          Commands may require zero, one, or two addresses.  Commands
          that require no addresses regard the presence of an address
          as an error.  Commands that accept one or two addresses
          assume default addresses when an insufficient number of
          addresses is given; if more addresses are given than such a
          command requires, the last address(es) are used.

          Typically, addresses are separated from each other by a
          comma (,).  They may also be separated by a semicolon (;).
          In the latter case, the current line (.) is set to the first
          address, and only then is the second address calculated.
          This feature can be used to determine the starting line for
          forward and backward searches (see rules 5 and 6 above).
          The second address of any two-address sequence must
          correspond to a line that follows, in the buffer, the line
          corresponding to the first address.

          In the following list of ed commands, the default addresses
          are shown in parentheses.  The parentheses are not part of
          the address; they show that the given addresses are the
          default.




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     ED(C)                    XENIX System V                     ED(C)



          It is generally illegal for more than one command to appear
          on a line.  However, any command (except e, f, r, or w) may
          be suffixed by p or by l, in which case the current line is
          either printed or listed, respectively, as discussed below
          under the p and l commands.

          (.)a
          <text>
          .
               The append command reads the given text and appends it
               after the addressed line; dot is left at the last
               inserted line, or, if there were no inserted lines, at
               the addressed line.  Address 0 is legal for this
               command: it causes the ``appended'' text to be placed
               at the beginning of the buffer.

          (.)c
          <text>
          .
               The change command deletes the addressed lines, then
               accepts input text that replaces these lines; dot is
               left at the last line input, or, if there were none, at
               the first line that was not deleted.

          (.,.)d
               The delete command deletes the addressed lines from the
               buffer.  The line after the last line deleted becomes
               the current line; if the lines deleted were originally
               at the end of the buffer, the new last line becomes the
               current line.

          e file
               The edit command causes the entire contents of the
               buffer to be deleted, and then the named file to be
               read in; dot is set to the last line of the buffer.  If
               no filename is given, the currently remembered
               filename, if any, is used (see the f command).  The
               number of characters read is typed; file is remembered
               for possible use as a default filename in subsequent e,
               r, and w commands.  If file begins with an exclamation
               (!), the rest of the line is taken to be a shell
               command. The output of this command is read for the e
               and r commands.  For the w command, the file is used as
               the standard input for the specified command.  Such a
               shell command is not remembered as the current
               filename.

          E file
               The Edit command is like e, except the editor does not
               check to see if any changes have been made to the
               buffer since the last w command.




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     ED(C)                    XENIX System V                     ED(C)



          f file
               If file is given, the filename command changes the
               currently remembered filename to file; otherwise, it
               prints the currently remembered filename.

          (1,$)g/regular-expression/command list
               In the global command, the first step is to mark every
               line that matches the given regular expression.  Then,
               for every such line, the given command list is executed
               with . initially set to that line.  A single command or
               the first of a list of commands appears on the same
               line as the global command.  All lines of a multiline
               list except the last line must be ended with a \; a, i,
               and c commands and associated input are permitted; the
               . terminating input mode may be omitted if it would be
               the last line of the command list.  An empty command
               list is equivalent to the p command.  The g, G, v, and
               V commands are not permitted in the command list.  See
               also Notes and the last paragraph before Files below.

          (1,$)G/regular-expression/
               In the interactive Global command, the first step is to
               mark every line that matches the given regular
               expression.  Then, for every such line, that line is
               printed, dot (.) is changed to that line, and any one
               command (other than one of the a, c, i, g, G, v, and V
               commands) may be input and is executed.  After the
               execution of that command, the next marked line is
               printed, and so on; a newline acts as a null command;
               an ampersand (&) causes the re-execution of the most
               recent command executed within the current invocation
               of G.  Note that the commands input as part of the
               execution of the G command may address and affect any
               lines in the buffer.  The G command can be terminated
               by entering an INTERRUPT.

          h
               The help command gives a short error message that
               explains the reason for the most recent ? diagnostic.

          H
               The Help command causes ed to enter a mode in which
               error messages are printed for all subsequent ?
               diagnostics.  It will also explain the previous
               diagnostic if there was one.  The H command alternately
               turns this mode on and off; it is initially on.

          (.)i
          <text>
          .
               The insert command inserts the given text before the
               addressed line; dot is left at the last inserted line,



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     ED(C)                    XENIX System V                     ED(C)



               or if there were no inserted lines, at the addressed
               line.  This command differs from the a command only in
               the placement of the input text.  Address 0 is not
               legal for this command.

          (.,.+1)j
               The join command joins contiguous lines by removing the
               appropriate newline characters.  If only one address is
               given, this command does nothing.

          (.)kx
               The mark command marks the addressed line with name x,
               which must be a lowercase letter.  The address 'x then
               addresses this line; dot is unchanged.

          (.,.)l
               The list command prints the addressed lines in an
               unambiguous way: a few nonprinting characters (e.g.,
               tab, backspace) are represented by mnemonic
               overstrikes, all other nonprinting characters are
               printed in octal, and long lines are folded.  An l
               command may be appended to any command other than e, f,
               r, or w.

          (.,.)ma
               The move command repositions the addressed line(s)
               after the line addressed by a.  Address 0 is legal for
               a and causes the addressed line(s) to be moved to the
               beginning of the file; it is an error if address a
               falls within the range of moved lines; dot is left at
               the last line moved.

          (.,.)n
               The number command prints the addressed lines,
               preceding each line by its line number and a tab
               character; dot is left at the last line printed.  The n
               command may be appended to any command other than e, f,
               r, or w.

          (.,.)p
               The print command prints the addressed lines; dot is
               left at the last line printed.  The p command may be
               appended to any command other than e, f, r, or w; for
               example, dp deletes the current line and prints the new
               current line.

          P
               The editor will prompt with a * for all subsequent
               commands.  The P command alternately turns this mode on
               and off; it is initially on.

          q



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     ED(C)                    XENIX System V                     ED(C)



               The quit command causes ed to exit.  No automatic write
               of a file is done.

          Q
               The editor exits without checking if changes have been
               made in the buffer since the last w command.

          ($)r file
               The read command reads in the given file after the
               addressed line.  If no filename is given, the currently
               remembered filename, if any, is used (see e and f
               commands).  The currently remembered filename is not
               changed unless file is the very first filename
               mentioned since ed was invoked.  Address 0 is legal for
               r and causes the file to be read at the beginning of
               the buffer.  If the read is successful, the number of
               characters read is typed; dot is set to the last line
               read in.  If file begins with !, the rest of the line
               is taken to be a shell (sh(C)) command whose output is
               to be read.  Such a shell command is not remembered as
               the current filename.

          (.,.)s/regular-expression/replacement/ or

          (.,.)s/regular-expression/replacement/g or

          (.,.)s/regular-expression/replacement/n n=1-512

               The substitute command searches each addressed line for
               an occurrence of the specified regular expression.  In
               each line in which a match is found, all
               (nonoverlapped) matched strings are replaced by the
               replacement if the global replacement indicator g
               appears after the command.  If the global indicator
               does not appear, only the first occurrence of the
               matched string is replaced.  It is an error for the
               substitution to fail on all addressed lines.  Any
               character other than space or newline may be used
               instead of / to delimit the regular expression and the
               replacement; dot is left at the last line on which a
               substitution occurred.

               An ampersand (&) appearing in the replacement is
               replaced by the string matching the regular expression
               on the current line.  The special meaning of the
               ampersand in this context may be suppressed by
               preceding it with a backslash.  The characters \n,
               where n is a digit, are replaced by the text matched by
               the n-th regular subexpression of the specified regular
               expression enclosed between \( and \).  When nested
               parenthesized subexpressions are present, n is
               determined by counting occurrences of \( starting from



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     ED(C)                    XENIX System V                     ED(C)



               the left.  When the character % is the only character
               in the replacement, the replacement used in the most
               recent substitute command is used as the replacement in
               the current substitute command.  The % loses its
               special meaning when it is in a replacement string of
               more than one character or is preceded by a \.

               A line may be split by substituting a newline character
               into it.  The newline in the replacement must be
               escaped by preceding it with a  \.  Such a substitution
               cannot be done as part of a g or v command list.

          (.,.)ta
               This command acts just like the m command, except that
               a copy of the addressed lines is placed after address a
               (which may be 0); dot is left at the last line of the
               copy.

          u
               The undo command nullifies the effect of the most
               recent command that modified anything in the buffer,
               namely the most recent a, c, d, g, i, j, m, r, s, t, v,
               G, or V command.

          (1,$)v/regular-expression/command list
               This command is the same as the global command g except
               that the command list is executed with dot initially
               set to every line that does not match the regular
               expression.

          (1,$)V/regular-expression/
               This command is the same as the interactive global
               command G except that the lines that are marked during
               the first step are those that do not match the regular
               expression.

          (1,$)w file
               The write command writes the addressed lines into the
               named file.  If the file does not exist, it is created
               with mode 666 (readable and writeable by everyone),
               unless the umask setting (see sh(C)) dictates
               otherwise.  The currently remembered filename is not
               changed unless file is the very first filename
               mentioned since ed was invoked.  If no filename is
               given, the currently remembered filename, if any, is
               used (see e and f commands); dot is unchanged.  If the
               command is successful, the number of characters written
               is displayed.  If file begins with an exclamation (!),
               the rest of the line is taken to be a shell command to
               which the addressed lines are supplied as the standard
               input.  Such a shell command is not remembered as the
               current filename.



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          ($)=
               The line number of the addressed line is typed; dot is
               unchanged by this command.

          !shell command
               The remainder of the line after the ! is sent to the
               XENIX shell (sh(C)) to be interpreted as a command.
               Within the text of that command, the unescaped
               character % is replaced with the remembered filename;
               if a ! appears as the first character of the shell
               command, it is replaced with the text of the previous
               shell command.  Thus, !! will repeat the last shell
               command.  If any expansion is performed, the expanded
               line is echoed; dot is unchanged.

          (.+1)
               An address alone on a line causes the addressed line to
               be printed.  A RETURN alone on a line is equivalent to
               .+1p. This is useful for stepping forward through the
               editing buffer a line at a time.

          If an interrupt signal (ASCII DEL or BREAK) is sent, ed
          prints a question mark (?) and returns to its command level.

          Some size limitations: 512 characters per line, 256
          characters per global command list, 64 characters per
          filename, and 128K characters in the buffer.  The limit on
          the number of lines depends on the amount of user memory.

          When reading a file, ed discards ASCII NUL characters and
          all characters after the last newline.  Files (e.g., a.out)
          that contain characters not in the ASCII set (bit 8 on),
          cannot be edited by ed.

          If the closing delimiter of a regular expression or of a
          replacement string (e.g., /) would be the last character
          before a newline, that delimiter may be omitted, in which
          case the addressed line is printed.  Thus, the following
          pairs of commands are equivalent:

               s/s1/s2s/s1/s2/p
               g/s1g/s1/p
               ?s1?s1?

     Files
          /tmp/e#   Temporary; # is the process number

          ed.hup    Work is saved here if the terminal is hung up

     See Also
          grep(C), sed(C), sh(C), stty(C), regexp(S)




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     Diagnostics
          ?    Command errors
          ? file    An inaccessible file

          Use the help and Help commands for detailed explanations.

          If changes have been made in the buffer since the last w
          command that wrote the entire buffer, ed warns the user if
          an attempt is made to destroy ed's buffer via the e or q
          commands: it prints ? and allows you to continue editing.  A
          second e or q command at this point will take effect.  The
          dash (-) command-line option inhibits this feature.

     Notes
          An exclamation (!) command cannot be subject to a g or a v
          command.

          The ! command and the ! escape from the e, r, and w commands
          cannot be used if the the editor is invoked from a
          restricted shell (see sh(C)).

          The sequence \n in a regular expression does not match any
          character.

          The l command mishandles DEL.

          Because 0 is an illegal address for the w command, it is not
          possible to create an empty file with ed.

          Characters are mashed to 7 bits on input.

          If the editor input is coming from a command file (i.e., ed
          file < ed-cmd-file), the editor will exit at the first
          failure of a command in the command file.





















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