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 ED(1) ED(1)
 NAME
 ed - text editor
 SYNOPSIS
 ed [ - ] [ -x ] [ name ]
 DESCRIPTION
 Ed is the standard text editor.
 If a name 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. If -x is
 present, an x command is simulated first to handle an
 encrypted file. The optional - suppresses the printing of
 character counts by e, r, and w commands.
 Ed operates on a copy of any file it is editing; changes
 made in 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.
 Commands to ed have a simple and regular structure: zero or
 more addresses followed by a single character command, pos-
 sibly followed by parameters to the command. These
 addresses specify one or more lines in the buffer. Missing
 addresses are supplied by default.
 In general, only one command may appear on a line. Certain
 commands allow the addition of text to 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 col-
 lected. Input mode is left by typing a period `.' alone at
 the beginning of a line.
 Ed supports a limited form of regular expression notation.
 A regular expression specifies a set of strings of charac-
 ters. A member of this set of strings is said to be matched
 by the regular expression. In the following specification
 for regular expressions the word `character' means any char-
 acter but newline.
 1. Any character except a special character matches
 itself. Special characters are the regular expression
 delimiter plus \[. and sometimes ^*$.
 2. A . matches any character.
 3. A \ followed by any character except a digit or ()
 matches that character.
 ED(1) ED(1)
 4. A nonempty string s bracketed [s] (or [^s]) matches any
 character in (or not in) s. In s, \ has no special
 meaning, and ] may only appear as the first letter. A
 substring a-b, with a and b in ascending ASCII order,
 stands for the inclusive range of ASCII characters.
 5. A regular expression of form 1-4 followed by * matches
 a sequence of 0 or more matches of the regular expres-
 sion.
 6. A regular expression, x, of form 1-8, bracketed \(x\)
 matches what x matches.
 7. A \ followed by a digit n matches a copy of the string
 that the bracketed regular expression beginning with
 the nth \( matched.
 8. A regular expression of form 1-8, x, followed by a reg-
 ular expression of form 1-7, y matches a match for x
 followed by a match for y, with the x match being as
 long as possible while still permitting a y match.
 9. A regular expression of form 1-8 preceded by ^ (or fol-
 lowed by $), is constrained to matches that begin at
 the left (or end at the right) end of a line.
 10. A regular expression of form 1-9 picks out the longest
 among the leftmost matches in a line.
 11. An empty regular expression stands for a copy of the
 last regular expression encountered.
 Regular expressions are used in addresses to specify lines
 and in one command (see s below) to specify a portion of a
 line which is to be replaced. If it is desired to use one
 of the regular expression metacharacters as an ordinary
 character, that character may be preceded by `\'. This also
 applies to the character bounding the regular expression
 (often `/') and to `\' itself.
 To understand addressing in ed it is necessary to know that
 at any time there is a current line. Generally speaking, the
 current line is the last line affected by a command; how-
 ever, the exact effect on the current line is discussed
 under the description of the command. Addresses are con-
 structed as follows.
 1. The character `.' addresses the current line.
 2. The character `$' addresses the last line of the
 buffer.
 ED(1) ED(1)
 3. A decimal number n addresses the n-th line of the
 buffer.
 4. `'x' addresses the line marked with the name x, which
 must be a lower-case letter. Lines are marked with the
 k command described below.
 5. A regular expression enclosed in slashes `/' addresses
 the line found by searching forward from the current
 line and stopping at the first line containing a string
 that matches the regular expression. If necessary the
 search wraps around to the beginning of the buffer.
 6. A regular expression enclosed in queries `?' addresses
 the line found by searching backward from the current
 line and stopping at the first line containing a string
 that matches the regular expression. If necessary the
 search wraps around to the end of the buffer.
 7. An address followed by a plus sign `+' or a minus sign
 `-' followed by a decimal number specifies that address
 plus (resp. 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
 (resp. subtracted). As a consequence of this rule and
 rule 8, the address `-' refers to the line before the
 current line. Moreover, trailing `+' and `-' charac-
 ters have cumulative effect, so `--' refers to the
 current line less 2.
 10. To maintain compatibility with earlier versions of the
 editor, the character `^' in addresses is equivalent to
 `-'.
 Commands may require zero, one, or two addresses. Commands
 which require no addresses regard the presence of an address
 as an error. Commands which accept one or two addresses
 assume default addresses when insufficient are given. If
 more addresses are given than such a command requires, the
 last one or two (depending on what is accepted) are used.
 Addresses are separated from each other typically by a comma
 `,'. They may also be separated by a semicolon `;'. In
 this case the current line `.' is set to the previous
 address before the next address is interpreted. This
 feature can be used to determine the starting line for for-
 ward and backward searches (`/', `?'). The second address
 ED(1) ED(1)
 of any two-address sequence must correspond to a line fol-
 lowing 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, but are used to show that the given addresses
 are the default.
 As mentioned, it is generally illegal for more than one com-
 mand to appear on a line. However, most commands may be
 suffixed by `p' or by `l', in which case the current line is
 either printed or listed respectively in the way discussed
 below.
 (.)a
 <text>
 .
 The append command reads the given text and appends it
 after the addressed line. `.' is left on the last line
 input, if there were any, otherwise at the addressed
 line. Address `0' is legal for this command; text is
 placed at the beginning of the buffer.
 (., .)c
 <text>
 .
 The change command deletes the addressed lines, then
 accepts input text which replaces these lines. `.' is
 left at the last line input; if there were none, it is
 left at the line preceding the deleted lines.
 (., .)d
 The delete command deletes the addressed lines from the
 buffer. The line originally after the last line
 deleted becomes the current line; if the lines deleted
 were originally at the end, the new last line becomes
 the current line.
 e filename
 The edit command causes the entire contents of the
 buffer to be deleted, and then the named file to be
 read in. `.' is set to the last line of the buffer.
 The number of characters read is typed. `filename' is
 remembered for possible use as a default file name in a
 subsequent r or w command. If `filename' is missing,
 the remembered name is used.
 E filename
 This command is the same as e, except that no diagnos-
 tic results when no w has been given since the last
 buffer alteration.
 ED(1) ED(1)
 f filename
 The filename command prints the currently remembered
 file name. If `filename' is given, the currently
 remembered file name is changed to `filename'.
 (1,$)g/regular expression/command list
 In the global command, the first step is to mark every
 line which 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 multiple commands appears on the same
 line with the global command. All lines of a multi-
 line list except the last line must be ended with `\'.
 A, i, and c commands and associated input are permit-
 ted; the `.' terminating input mode may be omitted if
 it would be on the last line of the command list. The
 commands g and v are not permitted in the command list.
 (.)i
 <text>
 .
 This command inserts the given text before the
 addressed line. `.' is left at the last line input,
 or, if there were none, at the line before the
 addressed line. This command differs from the a com-
 mand only in the placement of the text.
 (., .+1)j
 This command joins the addressed lines into a single
 line; intermediate newlines simply disappear. `.' is
 left at the resulting line.
 ( . )kx
 The mark command marks the addressed line with name x,
 which must be a lower-case letter. The address form
 `'x' then addresses this line.
 (., .)l
 The list command prints the addressed lines in an unam-
 biguous way: non-graphic characters are printed in
 two-digit octal, and long lines are folded. The l com-
 mand may be placed on the same line after any non-i/o
 command.
 (., .)ma
 The move command repositions the addressed lines after
 the line addressed by a. The last of the moved lines
 becomes the current line.
 (., .)p
 The print command prints the addressed lines. `.' is
 ED(1) ED(1)
 left at the last line printed. The p command may be
 placed on the same line after any non-i/o command.
 (., .)P
 This command is a synonym for p.
 q The quit command causes ed to exit. No automatic write
 of a file is done.
 Q This command is the same as q, except that no diagnos-
 tic results when no w has been given since the last
 buffer alteration.
 ($)r filename
 The read command reads in the given file after the
 addressed line. If no file name is given, the remem-
 bered file name, if any, is used (see e and f com-
 mands). The file name is remembered if there was no
 remembered file name already. 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. `.' is left at the last line
 read in from the file.
 ( ., .)s/regular expression/replacement/ or,
 ( ., .)s/regular expression/replacement/g
 The substitute command searches each addressed line for
 an occurrence of the specified regular expression. On
 each line in which a match is found, all matched
 strings are replaced by the replacement specified, 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
 new-line may be used instead of `/' to delimit the reg-
 ular expression and the replacement. `.' is left at
 the last line substituted.
 An ampersand `&' appearing in the replacement is
 replaced by the string matching the regular expression.
 The special meaning of `&' in this context may be
 suppressed by preceding it by `\'. The characters `\n'
 where n is a digit, are replaced by the text matched by
 the n-th regular subexpression enclosed between `\('
 and `\)'. When nested, parenthesized subexpressions
 are present, n is determined by counting occurrences of
 `\(' starting from the left.
 Lines may be split by substituting new-line characters
 into them. The new-line in the replacement string must
 be escaped by preceding it by `\'.
 ED(1) ED(1)
 (., .)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). `.' is left on the last line of the
 copy.
 (., .)u
 The undo command restores the preceding contents of the
 current line, which must be the last line in which a
 substitution was made.
 (1, $)v/regular expression/command list
 This command is the same as the global command g except
 that the command list is executed g with `.' initially
 set to every line except those matching the regular
 expression.
 (1, $)w filename
 The write command writes the addressed lines onto the
 given file. If the file does not exist, it is created
 mode 666 (readable and writable by everyone). The file
 name is remembered if there was no remembered file name
 already. If no file name is given, the remembered file
 name, if any, is used (see e and f commands). `.' is
 unchanged. If the command is successful, the number of
 characters written is printed.
 (1,$)W filename
 This command is the same as w, except that the
 addressed lines are appended to the file.
 x A key string is demanded from the standard input.
 Later r, e and w commands will encrypt and decrypt the
 text with this key by the algorithm of crypt(1). An
 explicitly empty key turns off encryption.
 ($)= The line number of the addressed line is typed. `.' is
 unchanged by this command.
 !<shell command>
 The remainder of the line after the `!' is sent to
 sh(1) to be interpreted as a command. `.' is
 unchanged.
 (.+1)<newline>
 An address alone on a line causes the addressed line to
 be printed. A blank line alone is equivalent to
 `.+1p'; it is useful for stepping through text.
 If an interrupt signal (ASCII DEL) is sent, ed prints a `?'
 and returns to its command level.
 ED(1) ED(1)
 Some size limitations: 512 characters per line, 256 charac-
 ters per global command list, 64 characters per file name,
 and 128K characters in the temporary file. The limit on the
 number of lines depends on the amount of core: each line
 takes 1 word.
 When reading a file, ed discards ASCII NUL characters and
 all characters after the last newline. It refuses to read
 files containing non-ASCII characters.
 FILES
 /tmp/e*
 ed.hup: work is saved here if terminal hangs up
 SEE ALSO
 B. W. Kernighan, A Tutorial Introduction to the ED Text Edi-
 tor
 B. W. Kernighan, Advanced editing on UNIX
 sed(1), crypt(1)
 DIAGNOSTICS
 `?name' for inaccessible file; `?' for errors in commands;
 `?TMP' for temporary file overflow.
 To protect against throwing away valuable work, a q or e
 command is considered to be in error, unless a w has
 occurred since the last buffer change. A second q or e will
 be obeyed regardless.
 BUGS
 The l command mishandles DEL.
 A ! command cannot be subject to a g command.
 Because 0 is an illegal address for a w command, it is not
 possible to create an empty file with ed.

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