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Using sed to edit a z/OS UNIX file z/OS UNIX System Services User's Guide SA23-2279-00 |
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Using the shell: Because sed is a noninteractive editor, you do not use it in an interactive session. Instead, enter the sed command specifying a file that contains editing commands and a data file, and it produces an edited target file with no user interaction. sed is intended for systematic editing, as opposed to the usual editing-on-the-fly performed by interactive users. sed subcommands are similar to those used with ed, except that sed commands view the input text as a stream rather than as a directly addressable file. Each line of the file that contains editing commands has up to two addresses, a single-letter command, possible command modifiers, and an ending newline character. For more details on sed, see the sed command description in z/OS UNIX System Services Command Reference. |
Copyright IBM Corporation 1990, 2014
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