El día Friday, July 12, 2013 a las 10:44:07AM -0500, Robert Bonomi escribió:
> > I can delete in a text file with
> >
> > sed '/pattern1/,/pattern2/d' < file
> >
> > all lines between the lines with the given patterns, including themself
> > also; how could I specify that the deletion should exclude the line with
> > /pattern1/, i.e. the addr is something like /pattern1/+1 ?
>
> IF you use ed(1) style commands, then '/pattern1/+1,/pattern2/d' _is_ the
> answer. <GRIN>
>
> See: 'man 1 ed', specifically the LINE ADDRSSING section.
> ...
I know, but I wanted it to be a 'one line command' w/o additional script
files; yesterday evening, while sitting in a beergarden, I came up with
the idea to first add one line to the file after the line with pattern1 and
use this new pattern3 for the start of the deletion:
awk -v D=pattern3 '{ print } ; /pattern1/ { print D }' | sed
'/pattern3/,/pattern2/d'
Thanks for your thoughts in any case
matthias
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