Sed Command in Linux/Unix With Examples (original) (raw)

Last Updated : 7 Apr, 2026

The sed command in Linux, short for stream editor, is a non-interactive text editor used to perform basic text transformations on an input stream, such as a file or input from a pipeline. It processes text line by line, applying the editing commands you specify. It can also be used for searching, inserting, deleting and modifying text efficiently.

sed_command_in_linux

Internally, sed works with two workspaces: the pattern space, which holds the line being modified and the hold space, which can temporarily store a line for later use.

Sed Command Syntax

The basic syntax for using the **SED command in Linux is:

sed [OPTIONS] 'COMMAND' [INPUTFILE...]

where,

Commonly Used SED Command Options

Below are some of the most frequently used SED command options, let's check them out:

Option Description
**-i Edit the file in-place (overwrite)
**-n Suppress automatic printing of lines.
**-e Allows multiple commands.
**-f Reads sed commands from a file.
**-r Use extended regular expressions.

Practical Examples of SED Command Usage

Here are some basic SED commands that will help you get started with text manipulation.

Consider the below text file as an input.

**cat > geekfile.txt

unix is great os. unix is opensource. unix is free os.
learn operating system.
unix linux which one you choose.
unix is easy to learn.unix is a multiuser os.Learn unix .unix is a powerful.

1. Sample Commands

Replacing or substituting string: Sed command is mostly used to replace the text in a file. The below simple sed command replaces the word "unix" with "linux" in the file.

**sed 's/unix/linux/' geekfile.txt

**Output:

linux is great os. unix is opensource. unix is free os.
learn operating system.
linux linux which one you choose.
linux is easy to learn.unix is a multiuser os.Learn unix .unix is a powerful.

Here the "s" specifies the substitution operation. The "/" are delimiters. The "unix" is the search pattern and the "linux" is the replacement string. By default, the sed command replaces the first occurrence of the pattern in each line and it won't replace the second, third...occurrence in the line.

2. Replacing the nth Occurrence of a Pattern in a Line

To replace only the nth occurance of a word in a line, use the following syntax:

sed 's/old_word/new_word/n' filename

Use the '/1', '/2' etc. flags to replace the first, second occurrence of a pattern in a line. The below command replaces the second occurrence of the word "unix" with "linux" in a line.

**sed 's/unix/linux/2' geekfile.txt

**Output:

unix is great os. linux is opensource. unix is free os.
learn operating system.
unix linux which one you choose.
unix is easy to learn.linux is a multiuser os.Learn unix .unix is a powerful.

3. Replacing all the Occurrence of the Pattern in a Line

Here, we will use the g flag to replace all the occurances of a pattern in a line. Let's check out the syntax below:

sed 's/old_word/new_word/g' filename

The substitute flag /g (global replacement) specifies the sed command to replace all the occurrences of the string in the line.

**sed 's/unix/linux/g' geekfile.txt

**Output:

linux is great os. linux is opensource. linux is free os.
learn operating system.
linux linux which one you choose.
linux is easy to learn.linux is a multiuser os.Learn linux .linux is a powerful.

4. Replacing from nth Occurrence to all Occurrences in a Line

Use the combination of /1, /2 etc and /g to replace all the patterns from the nth occurrence of a pattern in a line. The following sed command replaces the third, fourth, fifth... "unix" word with ****"linux"** word in a line.

**sed 's/unix/linux/3g' geekfile.txt

**Output:

unix is great os. unix is opensource. linux is free os.
learn operating system.
unix linux which one you choose.
unix is easy to learn.unix is a multiuser os.Learn linux .linux is a powerful.

5. Parenthesize First Character of Each Word

This sed example prints the first character of every word in parenthesis.

**echo "Welcome To The Geek Stuff" | sed 's/(\b[A-Z])/(\1)/g'

Output:

(W)elcome (T)o (T)he (G)eek (S)tuff

6. Replacing String on a Specific Line Number

You can restrict the sed command to replace the string on a specific line number. An example is

**sed '3 s/unix/linux/' geekfile.txt

**Output:

unix is great os. unix is opensource. unix is free os.
learn operating system.
linux linux which one you choose.
unix is easy to learn.unix is a multiuser os.Learn unix .unix is a powerful.

The above sed command replaces the string only on the third line.

7. Duplicating the Replaced Line with /p flag

The ****/p** print flag prints the replaced line twice on the terminal. If a line does not have the search pattern and is not replaced, then the ****/p** prints that line only once.

**sed 's/unix/linux/p' geekfile.txt

**Output:

linux is great os. unix is opensource. unix is free os.
linux is great os. unix is opensource. unix is free os.
learn operating system.
linux linux which one you choose.
linux linux which one you choose.
linux is easy to learn.unix is a multiuser os.Learn unix .unix is a powerful.
linux is easy to learn.unix is a multiuser os.Learn unix .unix is a powerful.

8. Printing Only the Replaced Lines

Use the -n option along with the /p print flag to display only the replaced lines. Here the **-n option suppresses the duplicate rows generated by the /p flag and prints the replaced lines only one time.

**sed -n 's/unix/linux/p' geekfile.txt

**Output:

linux is great os. unix is opensource. unix is free os.
linux linux which one you choose.
linux is easy to learn.unix is a multiuser os.Learn unix .unix is a powerful.

If you use -n alone without /p, then the sed does not print anything.

**9. Replacing String on a Range of Lines

You can specify a range of line numbers to the sed command for replacing a string.

**sed '1,3 s/unix/linux/' geekfile.txt

**Output:

linux is great os. unix is opensource. unix is free os.
learn operating system.
linux linux which one you choose.
unix is easy to learn.unix is a multiuser os.Learn unix .unix is a powerful.

Here the sed command replaces the lines with range from 1 to 3. Another example is

**sed '2,$ s/unix/linux/' geekfile.txt

**Output:

unix is great os. unix is opensource. unix is free os.
learn operating system.
linux linux which one you choose.
linux is easy to learn.unix is a multiuser os.Learn unix .unix is a powerful

Here $ indicates the last line in the file. So the sed command replaces the text from second line to last line in the file.

10. Deleting Lines from a Particular File

SED command can also be used for deleting lines from a particular file. SED command is used for performing deletion operation without even opening the file

**Examples:

1. To Delete a particular line say n in this example

**Syntax:
sed 'nd' filename.txt

**Example:
sed '5d' filename.txt

2. To Delete a last line

**Syntax:
sed '$d' filename.txt

3. To Delete line from range x to y

**Syntax:
sed 'x,yd' filename.txt

**Example:
sed '3,6d' filename.txt

4. To Delete from nth to last line

**Syntax:
sed 'nth,$d' filename.txt

**Example:
sed '12,$d' filename.txt

5. To Delete pattern matching line

**Syntax:
sed '/pattern/d' filename.txt

**Example:
sed '/abc/d' filename.txt

For more: SED command in Linux

Advanced SED Command Examples

Below are some of the advanced SED commands that can be used for handling various editing tasks. let's check them out:

1. Regular Expressions

SED supports regular expressions that allows it to handle more complex pattern matching. To enable regular expressions, you need to use -r option.

**Example:

Here, we have matched any word start with 'u' and replacing it with "Linux". Let's check this out in the provided syntax below:

sed -r 's/\bu\w+/Linux/g' geekfile.txt

2. Insert Text

You can use this option to insert any text before or after any specific line. Here's the syntax provided below:

sed '3i\new text' filename # Insert text before line 3
sed '3a\new text' filename # Insert text after line 3

**Example: To insert a new line before line2 in geekfile.txt

sed '2i\This is a new line' geekfile.txt

Best Practices