Ed
ed(1) is a non-visual text editor. It remains a powerful utility for scripted in-place file manipulation.
Installation
Most modern systems do not offer ed(1). Instead ex(1), which is bundled within the vim package, is symlinked to ed(1). This will be pre-installed on any Linux or BSD operating system, as a POSIX utility.
Input Mode
ed(1) enters input mode after one the following commands has been given:
append (a)
change (c)
insert (i)
Exit input mode by giving a period (.) alone.
Examples
Insert a Line into a File
Shell scripts make it trivial to append to a file. There are excellent tools such as sed(1) for search/replacing text. But there isn't a trivial way to, for example, insert a new line of text into the Nth line of a file.
This script demonstrates how such a task could be automated in part.
# Inserts a new third line into the file, # which sets `someYamlProperty` to `true` in a Markdown header of some file. ed "$1" <<EOF 3i someYamlProperty: true . w EOF
Line Editing
This script will rewrite itself to echo a new message.
message= #This function uses a heredoc to pass commands into `ed`. #It works like this: # - `1c` targets the first line for changing. Everything entered in input mode will replace this line. # - `message="$1"` is being inserted. Note that shell variables are evaluated in a heredoc. # - `.` exits input mode # - `w` writes the edited file to disk edScript() { ed -s "$(realpath -s $0)" <<EOF 1c message="$1" . w EOF } #If this script is given an arguments, the first argument is passed to the above function. #Otherwise, the script just echoes "$message". if [ $# -ge 1 ]; then edScript "$1" else echo "$message" fi
See also
Ex Reference Manual, the BSD4.4 UNIX User's Supplementary Document (USD)