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PROLOG

       This  manual  page  is part of the POSIX Programmer's Manual.  The Linux implementation of
       this interface may differ (consult the corresponding Linux  manual  page  for  details  of
       Linux behavior), or the interface may not be implemented on Linux.

NAME

       ed — edit text

SYNOPSIS

       ed [−p string] [−s] [file]

DESCRIPTION

       The  ed utility is a line-oriented text editor that uses two modes: command mode and input
       mode.  In command mode the input characters shall be interpreted as commands, and in input
       mode they shall be interpreted as text. See the EXTENDED DESCRIPTION section.

       If an operand is '−', the results are unspecified.

OPTIONS

       The ed utility shall conform to the Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2008, Section 12.2,
       Utility Syntax Guidelines, except for the unspecified usage of '−'.

       The following options shall be supported:

       −p string Use string as the prompt string when in command mode. By default, there shall be
                 no prompt string.

       −s        Suppress  the  writing  of byte counts by e, E, r, and w commands and of the '!'
                 prompt after a !command.

OPERANDS

       The following operand shall be supported:

       file      If the file argument is given, ed shall simulate an e command on the file  named
                 by the pathname, file, before accepting commands from the standard input.

STDIN

       The  standard  input  shall  be  a  text  file consisting of commands, as described in the
       EXTENDED DESCRIPTION section.

INPUT FILES

       The input files shall be text files.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       The following environment variables shall affect the execution of ed:

       HOME      Determine the pathname of the user's home directory.

       LANG      Provide a default value for the internationalization variables that are unset or
                 null.   (See   the   Base  Definitions  volume  of  POSIX.1‐2008,  Section  8.2,
                 Internationalization  Variables  for  the  precedence  of   internationalization
                 variables used to determine the values of locale categories.)

       LC_ALL    If  set  to  a  non-empty  string  value,  override  the values of all the other
                 internationalization variables.

       LC_COLLATE
                 Determine the locale for the behavior of ranges, equivalence classes, and multi-
                 character collating elements within regular expressions.

       LC_CTYPE  Determine  the  locale for the interpretation of sequences of bytes of text data
                 as characters (for example, single-byte as opposed to multi-byte  characters  in
                 arguments  and input files) and the behavior of character classes within regular
                 expressions.

       LC_MESSAGES
                 Determine the locale that should be used to affect the format  and  contents  of
                 diagnostic  messages  written to standard error and informative messages written
                 to standard output.

       NLSPATH   Determine the location of message catalogs for the processing of LC_MESSAGES.

ASYNCHRONOUS EVENTS

       The ed utility shall take the standard action for all signals (see the ASYNCHRONOUS EVENTS
       section in Section 1.4, Utility Description Defaults) with the following exceptions:

       SIGINT    The  ed  utility shall interrupt its current activity, write the string "?\n" to
                 standard output, and return  to  command  mode  (see  the  EXTENDED  DESCRIPTION
                 section).

       SIGHUP    If  the buffer is not empty and has changed since the last write, the ed utility
                 shall attempt to write a copy of the buffer in a file.  First,  the  file  named
                 ed.hup  in  the  current  directory shall be used; if that fails, the file named
                 ed.hup in the directory named by the HOME environment variable shall be used. In
                 any  case,  the  ed utility shall exit without writing the file to the currently
                 remembered pathname and without returning to command mode.

       SIGQUIT   The ed utility shall ignore this event.

STDOUT

       Various editing commands and the prompting feature (see −p) write to standard  output,  as
       described in the EXTENDED DESCRIPTION section.

STDERR

       The standard error shall be used only for diagnostic messages.

OUTPUT FILES

       The  output  files shall be text files whose formats are dependent on the editing commands
       given.

EXTENDED DESCRIPTION

       The ed utility shall operate on a copy of the file it is editing; changes made to the copy
       shall  have no effect on the file until a w (write) command is given. The copy of the text
       is called the buffer.

       Commands to ed have a simple and regular structure: zero, one, or two  addresses  followed
       by  a  single-character  command,  possibly  followed by parameters to that command. These
       addresses specify one or more lines in the buffer. Every command that  requires  addresses
       has  default  addresses, so that the addresses very often can be omitted. If the −p option
       is specified, the prompt string shall be written to standard output before each command is
       read.

       In  general,  only  one  command  can  appear on a line. Certain commands allow text to be
       input. This text is placed in the appropriate place in the buffer. While ed  is  accepting
       text,  it  is said to be in input mode. In this mode, no commands shall be recognized; all
       input is merely collected. Input mode is terminated by entering a line consisting  of  two
       characters:  a  <period> ('.')  followed by a <newline>.  This line is not considered part
       of the input text.

   Regular Expressions in ed
       The ed utility  shall  support  basic  regular  expressions,  as  described  in  the  Base
       Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2008, Section 9.3, Basic Regular Expressions.  Since regular
       expressions in ed are always matched  against  single  lines  (excluding  the  terminating
       <newline>  characters),  never  against  any larger section of text, there is no way for a
       regular expression to match a <newline>.

       A null RE shall be equivalent to the last RE encountered.

       Regular expressions are used in addresses to specify lines,  and  in  some  commands  (for
       example, the s substitute command) to specify portions of a line to be substituted.

   Addresses in ed
       Addressing in ed relates to the current line. Generally, the current line is the last line
       affected by a command. The current line number is the address of the current line. If  the
       edit buffer is not empty, the initial value for the current line shall be the last line in
       the edit buffer; otherwise, zero.

       Addresses shall be constructed as follows:

        1. The <period> character ('.')  shall address the current line.

        2. The <dollar-sign> character ('$') shall address the last line of the edit buffer.

        3. The positive decimal number n shall address the nth line of the edit buffer.

        4. The <apostrophe>-x character pair ("'x") shall address the line marked with  the  mark
           name  character  x, which shall be a lowercase letter from the portable character set.
           It shall be an error if the character has not been set to mark a line or if  the  line
           that was marked is not currently present in the edit buffer.

        5. A  BRE  enclosed  by  <slash>  characters  ('/') shall address the first line found by
           searching forwards from the line following the current line toward the end of the edit
           buffer  and  stopping  at  the first line for which the line excluding the terminating
           <newline> matches the BRE. The BRE consisting of a null BRE delimited  by  a  pair  of
           <slash>  characters  shall  address  the  next  line  for which the line excluding the
           terminating <newline> matches the  last  BRE  encountered.  In  addition,  the  second
           <slash>   can   be  omitted  at  the  end  of  a  command  line.  Within  the  BRE,  a
           <backslash>-<slash> pair ("\/") shall represent a literal <slash> instead of  the  BRE
           delimiter.  If  necessary, the search shall wrap around to the beginning of the buffer
           and continue up to and including the current  line,  so  that  the  entire  buffer  is
           searched.

        6. A BRE enclosed by <question-mark> characters ('?')  shall address the first line found
           by searching backwards from the line preceding the current line toward  the  beginning
           of  the  edit  buffer  and stopping at the first line for which the line excluding the
           terminating <newline> matches the BRE. The BRE consisting of a null BRE delimited by a
           pair  of  <question-mark>  characters ("??") shall address the previous line for which
           the line excluding the terminating <newline> matches  the  last  BRE  encountered.  In
           addition,  the  second  <question-mark>  can  be omitted at the end of a command line.
           Within the BRE, a <backslash>-<question-mark> pair ("\?") shall  represent  a  literal
           <question-mark>  instead  of  the  BRE  delimiter. If necessary, the search shall wrap
           around to the end of the buffer and continue up to and including the current line,  so
           that the entire buffer is searched.

        7. A  <plus-sign>  ('+')  or  <hyphen> character ('−') followed by a decimal number shall
           address the current line plus or minus the number. A <plus-sign> or <hyphen> character
           not followed by a decimal number shall address the current line plus or minus 1.

       Addresses  can  be followed by zero or more address offsets, optionally <blank>-separated.
       Address offsets are constructed as follows:

        *  A <plus-sign> or <hyphen>  character  followed  by  a  decimal  number  shall  add  or
           subtract, respectively, the indicated number of lines to or from the address. A <plus-
           sign> or <hyphen> character not followed by a decimal number shall add or  subtract  1
           to or from the address.

        *  A decimal number shall add the indicated number of lines to the address.

       It shall not be an error for an intermediate address value to be less than zero or greater
       than the last line in the edit buffer. It shall be an error for the final address value to
       be  less  than zero or greater than the last line in the edit buffer. It shall be an error
       if a search for a BRE fails to find a matching line.

       Commands accept zero, one, or two addresses. If more than the required number of addresses
       are  provided  to a command that requires zero addresses, it shall be an error. Otherwise,
       if more than the required number of addresses are provided to  a  command,  the  addresses
       specified  first  shall  be evaluated and then discarded until the maximum number of valid
       addresses remain, for the specified command.

       Addresses shall be separated from each other by a <comma> (',') or  <semicolon>  character
       (';').   In  the  case of a <semicolon> separator, the current line ('.')  shall be set to
       the first address, and only then will the second address be calculated. This  feature  can
       be  used  to determine the starting line for forwards and backwards searches; see rules 5.
       and 6.

       Addresses can be omitted on either side of the <comma> or <semicolon> separator, in  which
       case the resulting address pairs shall be as follows:

                                       ┌──────────┬─────────────┐
                                       │SpecifiedResulting  │
                                       ├──────────┼─────────────┤
                                       │,         │ 1 , $       │
                                       │, addr    │ 1 , addr    │
                                       │addr ,    │ addr , addr │
                                       │;         │ . ; $       │
                                       │; addr    │ . ; addr    │
                                       │addr ;    │ addr ; addr │
                                       └──────────┴─────────────┘
       Any  <blank> characters included between addresses, address separators, or address offsets
       shall be ignored.

   Commands in ed
       In the following list of ed commands, the default addresses are shown in parentheses.  The
       number  of addresses shown in the default shall be the number expected by the command. The
       parentheses are not part of the address; they  show  that  the  given  addresses  are  the
       default.

       It  is  generally  invalid  for  more  than one command to appear on a line.  However, any
       command (except e, E, f, q, Q, r, w, and !)  can be suffixed by the letter l, n, or p;  in
       which  case,  except  for the l, n, and p commands, the command shall be executed and then
       the new current line shall be written as described below under the l, n, and  p  commands.
       When  an  l, n, or p suffix is used with an l, n, or p command, the command shall write to
       standard output as described below, but it is unspecified whether the  suffix  writes  the
       current  line  again  in  the  requested  format  or whether the suffix has no effect. For
       example, the pl command (base p command with an l suffix)  shall  either  write  just  the
       current line or write it twice—once as specified for p and once as specified for l.  Also,
       the g, G, v, and V commands shall take a command as a parameter.

       Each address component can be preceded by zero or more  <blank>  characters.  The  command
       letter can be preceded by zero or more <blank> characters. If a suffix letter (l, n, or p)
       is given, the application shall ensure that it immediately follows the command.

       The e, E, f, r, and w commands shall take an optional file parameter, separated  from  the
       command letter by one or more <blank> characters.

       If  changes  have  been  made in the buffer since the last w command that wrote the entire
       buffer, ed shall warn the user if an attempt is made to destroy the editor buffer via  the
       e or q commands. The ed utility shall write the string:

           "?\n"

       (followed  by  an  explanatory message if help mode has been enabled via the H command) to
       standard output and shall continue in command mode with the current line number unchanged.
       If the e or q command is repeated with no intervening command, it shall take effect.

       If  a  terminal  disconnect  (see the Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2008, Chapter 11,
       General Terminal Interface, Modem Disconnect and Closing a Device Terminal), is detected:

        *  If accompanied by a SIGHUP signal, the ed utility shall operate as  described  in  the
           ASYNCHRONOUS EVENTS section for a SIGHUP signal.

        *  If  not  accompanied by a SIGHUP signal, the ed utility shall act as if an end-of-file
           had been detected on standard input.

       If an end-of-file is detected on standard input:

        *  If the ed utility is in input mode, ed  shall  terminate  input  mode  and  return  to
           command  mode.  It  is unspecified if any partially entered lines (that is, input text
           without a terminating <newline>) are discarded from the input text.

        *  If the ed utility is in command mode, it shall act as if a q command had been entered.

       If the closing delimiter of an RE or of a replacement string (for example, '/') in a g, G,
       s,  v,  or V command would be the last character before a <newline>, that delimiter can be
       omitted, in which case the addressed line shall be written.  For  example,  the  following
       pairs of commands are equivalent:

           s/s1/s2   s/s1/s2/p
           g/s1      g/s1/p
           ?s1       ?s1?

       If an invalid command is entered, ed shall write the string:

           "?\n"

       (followed  by  an  explanatory message if help mode has been enabled via the H command) to
       standard output and shall continue in command mode with the current line number unchanged.

   Append Command
       Synopsis:
                     (.)a
                     <text>
                     .

       The a command shall read the given text and  append  it  after  the  addressed  line;  the
       current  line  number shall become the address of the last inserted line or, if there were
       none, the addressed line. Address 0 shall be valid for this command; it  shall  cause  the
       appended text to be placed at the beginning of the buffer.

   Change Command
       Synopsis:
                     (.,.)c
                     <text>
                     .

       The c command shall delete the addressed lines, then accept input text that replaces these
       lines; the current line shall be set to the address of the last line input; or,  if  there
       were  none,  at the line after the last line deleted; if the lines deleted were originally
       at the end of the buffer, the current line number shall be set to the address of  the  new
       last line; if no lines remain in the buffer, the current line number shall be set to zero.
       Address 0 shall be valid for this command; it shall be interpreted as if  address  1  were
       specified.

   Delete Command
       Synopsis:
                     (.,.)d

       The  d  command  shall delete the addressed lines from the buffer. The address of the line
       after the last line deleted shall become the current line number;  if  the  lines  deleted
       were  originally  at  the  end  of the buffer, the current line number shall be set to the
       address of the new last line; if no lines remain in the buffer, the  current  line  number
       shall be set to zero.

   Edit Command
       Synopsis:
                     e [file]

       The  e  command  shall  delete the entire contents of the buffer and then read in the file
       named by the pathname file.  The current line number shall be set to the  address  of  the
       last  line  of  the buffer. If no pathname is given, the currently remembered pathname, if
       any, shall be used (see the f command). The number of  bytes  read  shall  be  written  to
       standard output, unless the −s option was specified, in the following format:

           "%d\n", <number of bytes read>

       The  name file shall be remembered for possible use as a default pathname in subsequent e,
       E, r, and w commands. If file is replaced by '!', the rest of the line shall be  taken  to
       be a shell command line whose output is to be read. Such a shell command line shall not be
       remembered as the current file.  All marks shall be discarded upon  the  completion  of  a
       successful  e command. If the buffer has changed since the last time the entire buffer was
       written, the user shall be warned, as described previously.

   Edit Without Checking Command
       Synopsis:
                     E [file]

       The E command shall possess all properties and restrictions of the e command  except  that
       the  editor  shall not check to see whether any changes have been made to the buffer since
       the last w command.

   Filename Command
       Synopsis:
                     f [file]

       If file is given, the f command shall change the currently remembered  pathname  to  file;
       whether  the  name  is  changed  or  not, it shall then write the (possibly new) currently
       remembered pathname to the standard output in the following format:

           "%s\n", <pathname>

       The current line number shall be unchanged.

   Global Command
       Synopsis:
                     (1,$)g/RE/command list

       In the g command, the first step shall be to mark every line for which the line  excluding
       the  terminating  <newline>  matches  the  given  RE.  Then,  going  sequentially from the
       beginning of the file to the end of the file, the given command list shall be executed for
       each  marked  line, with the current line number set to the address of that line. Any line
       modified by the command list shall be unmarked. When the g command completes, the  current
       line  number  shall  have  the value assigned by the last command in the command list.  If
       there were no matching lines, the current line number  shall  not  be  changed.  A  single
       command  or  the  first  of a list of commands shall appear on the same line as the global
       command. All lines of a multi-line list except  the  last  line  shall  be  ended  with  a
       <backslash>  preceding  the terminating <newline>; the a, i, and c commands and associated
       input are permitted. The '.'  terminating input mode can be omitted if  it  would  be  the
       last line of the command list. An empty command list shall be equivalent to the p command.
       The use of the g, G, v, V, and !  commands in the command list produces undefined results.
       Any  character other than <space> or <newline> can be used instead of a <slash> to delimit
       the RE. Within the RE, the RE delimiter itself can be used as a literal character if it is
       preceded by a <backslash>.

   Interactive Global Command
       Synopsis:
                     (1,$)G/RE/

       In  the G command, the first step shall be to mark every line for which the line excluding
       the terminating <newline> matches the given RE. Then, for every such line, that line shall
       be  written, the current line number shall be set to the address of that line, and any one
       command (other than one of the a, c, i, g, G,  v,  and  V  commands)  shall  be  read  and
       executed.  A  <newline>  shall act as a null command (causing no action to be taken on the
       current line); an '&' shall cause the re-execution of the  most  recent  non-null  command
       executed  within the current invocation of G.  Note that the commands input as part of the
       execution of the G command can address and affect  any  lines  in  the  buffer.  Any  line
       modified  by  the  command  shall  be unmarked. The final value of the current line number
       shall be the value set by the last command successfully  executed.  (Note  that  the  last
       command successfully executed shall be the G command itself if a command fails or the null
       command is specified.) If there were no matching lines, the current line number shall  not
       be  changed.  The G command can be terminated by a SIGINT signal. Any character other than
       <space> or <newline> can be  used  instead  of  a  <slash>  to  delimit  the  RE  and  the
       replacement.  Within the RE, the RE delimiter itself can be used as a literal character if
       it is preceded by a <backslash>.

   Help Command
       Synopsis:
                     h

       The h command shall write a short message to standard output that explains the reason  for
       the most recent '?'  notification. The current line number shall be unchanged.

   Help-Mode Command
       Synopsis:
                     H

       The  H  command  shall cause ed to enter a mode in which help messages (see the h command)
       shall be written to standard output for all subsequent '?'  notifications. The  H  command
       alternately  shall  turn  this  mode  on and off; it is initially off. If the help-mode is
       being turned on, the H command also explains the previous '?'  notification, if there  was
       one. The current line number shall be unchanged.

   Insert Command
       Synopsis:
                     (.)i
                     <text>
                     .

       The  i  command shall insert the given text before the addressed line; the current line is
       set to the last inserted line or, if there was none, to the addressed line.  This  command
       differs  from  the  a  command only in the placement of the input text. Address 0 shall be
       valid for this command; it shall be interpreted as if address 1 were specified.

   Join Command
       Synopsis:
                     (.,.+1)j

       The  j  command  shall  join  contiguous  lines  by  removing  the  appropriate  <newline>
       characters.  If  exactly one address is given, this command shall do nothing. If lines are
       joined, the current line number shall be set to the address of the joined line; otherwise,
       the current line number shall be unchanged.

   Mark Command
       Synopsis:
                     (.)kx

       The  k  command  shall  mark  the  addressed line with name x, which the application shall
       ensure is a lowercase letter from the portable character set. The address "'x" shall  then
       refer to this line; the current line number shall be unchanged.

   List Command
       Synopsis:
                     (.,.)l

       The l command shall write to standard output the addressed lines in a visually unambiguous
       form. The characters listed in the Base Definitions volume  of  POSIX.1‐2008,  Table  5-1,
       Escape  Sequences  and Associated Actions ('\\', '\a', '\b', '\f', '\r', '\t', '\v') shall
       be written as the corresponding escape sequence; the '\n' in that table is not applicable.
       Non-printable characters not in the table shall be written as one three-digit octal number
       (with a preceding <backslash> character) for each byte in the character (most  significant
       byte first).

       Long lines shall be folded, with the point of folding indicated by <newline> preceded by a
       <backslash>; the length at which folding occurs is unspecified, but should be  appropriate
       for the output device. The end of each line shall be marked with a '$', and '$' characters
       within the text shall be written with a  preceding  <backslash>.   An  l  command  can  be
       appended  to  any  other  command  other than e, E, f, q, Q, r, w, or !.  The current line
       number shall be set to the address of the last line written.

   Move Command
       Synopsis:
                     (.,.)maddress

       The m command shall reposition the addressed lines after the line  addressed  by  address.
       Address  0  shall  be  valid  for address and cause the addressed lines to be moved to the
       beginning of the buffer. It shall be an error if address address falls within the range of
       moved lines. The current line number shall be set to the address of the last line moved.

   Number Command
       Synopsis:
                     (.,.)n

       The  n  command shall write to standard output the addressed lines, preceding each line by
       its line number and a <tab>; the current line number shall be set to the  address  of  the
       last  line written. The n command can be appended to any command other than e, E, f, q, Q,
       r, w, or !.

   Print Command
       Synopsis:
                     (.,.)p

       The p command shall write to standard output the addressed lines; the current line  number
       shall be set to the address of the last line written. The p command can be appended to any
       command other than e, E, f, q, Q, r, w, or !.

   Prompt Command
       Synopsis:
                     P

       The P command shall cause ed to prompt with an <asterisk>  ('*')  (or  string,  if  −p  is
       specified)  for  all subsequent commands. The P command alternatively shall turn this mode
       on and off; it shall be initially on if the −p option is specified;  otherwise,  off.  The
       current line number shall be unchanged.

   Quit Command
       Synopsis:
                     q

       The  q  command  shall cause ed to exit. If the buffer has changed since the last time the
       entire buffer was written, the user shall be warned, as described previously.

   Quit Without Checking Command
       Synopsis:
                     Q

       The Q command shall cause ed to exit without checking whether changes have  been  made  in
       the buffer since the last w command.

   Read Command
       Synopsis:
                     ($)r [file]

       The  r  command  shall read in the file named by the pathname file and append it after the
       addressed line. If no file argument is given, the currently remembered pathname,  if  any,
       shall  be  used (see the e and f commands). The currently remembered pathname shall not be
       changed unless there is no remembered pathname. Address 0 shall be valid for r  and  shall
       cause  the  file to be read at the beginning of the buffer. If the read is successful, and
       −s was not specified, the number of bytes read shall be written to standard output in  the
       following format:

           "%d\n", <number of bytes read>

       The  current  line number shall be set to the address of the last line read in. If file is
       replaced by '!', the rest of the line shall be taken to be  a  shell  command  line  whose
       output  is  to  be  read. Such a shell command line shall not be remembered as the current
       pathname.

   Substitute Command
       Synopsis:
                     (.,.)s/RE/replacement/flags

       The s command shall search each addressed line for an occurrence of the specified  RE  and
       replace either the first or all (non-overlapped) matched strings with the replacement; see
       the following description of the g suffix. It is an error if  the  substitution  fails  on
       every addressed line. Any character other than <space> or <newline> can be used instead of
       a <slash> to delimit the RE and the replacement. Within the RE, the  RE  delimiter  itself
       can  be  used as a literal character if it is preceded by a <backslash>.  The current line
       shall be set to the address of the last line on which a substitution occurred.

       An <ampersand> ('&') appearing in the replacement shall be replaced by the string matching
       the  RE on the current line.  The special meaning of '&' in this context can be suppressed
       by preceding it by <backslash>.  As a more general feature, the characters '\n',  where  n
       is  a  digit,  shall  be  replaced by the text matched by the corresponding back-reference
       expression. If the corresponding  back-reference  expression  does  not  match,  then  the
       characters  '\n' shall be replaced by the empty string. When the character '%' is the only
       character in the replacement, the replacement used in the most recent  substitute  command
       shall  be  used  as  the  replacement  in  the current substitute command; if there was no
       previous substitute command, the use of '%' in this manner shall  be  an  error.  The  '%'
       shall  lose  its  special  meaning  when  it  is  in a replacement string of more than one
       character or is preceded by a <backslash>.  For each <backslash> encountered  in  scanning
       replacement  from beginning to end, the following character shall lose its special meaning
       (if any). It is unspecified what special meaning is given  to  any  character  other  than
       <backslash>, '&', '%', or digits.

       A  line  can be split by substituting a <newline> into it. The application shall ensure it
       escapes  the  <newline>  in  the  replacement  by  preceding  it  by  <backslash>.    Such
       substitution  cannot  be  done  as part of a g or v command list.  The current line number
       shall be set to the address of the last line on which a substitution is performed.  If  no
       substitution is performed, the current line number shall be unchanged. If a line is split,
       a substitution shall be considered to have been performed on each of the new lines for the
       purpose  of determining the new current line number. A substitution shall be considered to
       have been performed even if the replacement string is identical  to  the  string  that  it
       replaces.

       The application shall ensure that the value of flags is zero or more of:

       count   Substitute for the countth occurrence only of the RE found on each addressed line.

       g       Globally  substitute  for all non-overlapping instances of the RE rather than just
               the first one. If both g and count are specified, the results are unspecified.

       l       Write to standard output the final line in which a substitution was made. The line
               shall be written in the format specified for the l command.

       n       Write to standard output the final line in which a substitution was made. The line
               shall be written in the format specified for the n command.

       p       Write to standard output the final line in which a substitution was made. The line
               shall be written in the format specified for the p command.

   Copy Command
       Synopsis:
                     (.,.)taddress

       The  t  command  shall be equivalent to the m command, except that a copy of the addressed
       lines shall be placed after address address (which can be  0);  the  current  line  number
       shall be set to the address of the last line added.

   Undo Command
       Synopsis:
                     u

       The  u  command shall nullify the effect of the most recent command that modified anything
       in the buffer, namely the most recent a, c, d, g, i, j, m, r, s, t, u, v, G, or V command.
       All  changes  made  to  the  buffer by a g, G, v, or V global command shall be undone as a
       single change; if no changes were made by the global command (such as with g/RE/p), the  u
       command  shall  have  no  effect. The current line number shall be set to the value it had
       immediately before the command being undone started.

   Global Non-Matched Command
       Synopsis:
                     (1,$)v/RE/command list

       This command shall be equivalent to the global command g except that the  lines  that  are
       marked  during  the first step shall be those for which the line excluding the terminating
       <newline> does not match the RE.

   Interactive Global Not-Matched Command
       Synopsis:
                     (1,$)V/RE/

       This command shall be equivalent to the interactive global command G except that the lines
       that  are  marked  during  the  first step shall be those for which the line excluding the
       terminating <newline> does not match the RE.

   Write Command
       Synopsis:
                     (1,$)w [file]

       The w command shall write the addressed lines into the file named by  the  pathname  file.
       The  command shall create the file, if it does not exist, or shall replace the contents of
       the existing file. The currently remembered pathname shall not be changed unless there  is
       no  remembered  pathname.   If no pathname is given, the currently remembered pathname, if
       any, shall be used (see the e and f commands); the current line number shall be unchanged.
       If  the  command  is  successful, the number of bytes written shall be written to standard
       output, unless the −s option was specified, in the following format:

           "%d\n", <number of bytes written>

       If file begins with '!', the rest of the line shall be taken to be a  shell  command  line
       whose  standard input shall be the addressed lines. Such a shell command line shall not be
       remembered as the current pathname. This usage of the write command with '!'  shall not be
       considered  as a ``last w command that wrote the entire buffer'', as described previously;
       thus, this alone shall not prevent the warning to the  user  if  an  attempt  is  made  to
       destroy the editor buffer via the e or q commands.

   Line Number Command
       Synopsis:
                     ($)=

       The line number of the addressed line shall be written to standard output in the following
       format:

           "%d\n", <line number>

       The current line number shall be unchanged by this command.

   Shell Escape Command
       Synopsis:
                     !command

       The remainder of the line after the '!'  shall be sent to the command  interpreter  to  be
       interpreted  as  a  shell  command  line.  Within the text of that shell command line, the
       unescaped character '%' shall be replaced with the remembered pathname; if a '!'   appears
       as  the first character of the command, it shall be replaced with the text of the previous
       shell command executed via '!'.  Thus, "!!" shall repeat the  previous  !command.  If  any
       replacements  of  '%'  or  '!'   are  performed, the modified line shall be written to the
       standard output before command is executed. The !  command shall write:

           "!\n"

       to standard output upon completion, unless the −s option is specified.  The  current  line
       number shall be unchanged.

   Null Command
       Synopsis:
                     (.+1)

       An address alone on a line shall cause the addressed line to be written. A <newline> alone
       shall be equivalent to "+1p".  The current line number shall be set to the address of  the
       written line.

EXIT STATUS

       The following exit values shall be returned:

        0    Successful completion without any file or command errors.

       >0    An error occurred.

CONSEQUENCES OF ERRORS

       When  an  error in the input script is encountered, or when an error is detected that is a
       consequence of the data (not) present in the file or due to an external condition such  as
       a read or write error:

        *  If the standard input is a terminal device file, all input shall be flushed, and a new
           command read.

        *  If the standard input is a regular file, ed  shall  terminate  with  a  non-zero  exit
           status.

       The following sections are informative.

APPLICATION USAGE

       Because  of  the  extremely terse nature of the default error messages, the prudent script
       writer begins the ed input commands with an H command, so that if any errors do  occur  at
       least some clue as to the cause is made available.

       In  earlier  versions  of this standard, an obsolescent  option was described. This is no
       longer specified. Applications should use the −s option. Using  as  a  file  operand  now
       produces  unspecified  results.  This  allows  implementations  to continue to support the
       former required behavior.

EXAMPLES

       None.

RATIONALE

       The initial description of this utility was  adapted  from  the  SVID.  It  contains  some
       features  not  found in Version 7 or BSD-derived systems.  Some of the differences between
       the POSIX and BSD ed utilities include, but need not be limited to:

        *  The BSD  option does not suppress the '!'  prompt after a !  command.

        *  BSD does not support the special meanings of the '%' and '!'  characters  within  a  !
           command.

        *  BSD does not support the addresses ';' and ','.

        *  BSD  allows  the command/suffix pairs pp, ll, and so on, which are unspecified in this
           volume of POSIX.1‐2008.

        *  BSD does not support the '!'  character part of the e, r, or w commands.

        *  A failed g command in BSD sets the line number to the last line searched if there  are
           no matches.

        *  BSD does not default the command list to the p command.

        *  BSD does not support the G, h, H, n, or V commands.

        *  On  BSD,  if there is no inserted text, the insert command changes the current line to
           the referenced line −1; that is, the line before the specified line.

        *  On BSD, the join command with only a single address changes the current line  to  that
           address.

        *  BSD  does  not  support  the  P  command; moreover, in BSD it is synonymous with the p
           command.

        *  BSD does not support the undo of the commands j, m, r, s, or t.

        *  The Version 7 ed command W, and the BSD ed commands W, wq, and z are  not  present  in
           this volume of POSIX.1‐2008.

       The  −s  option  was  added to allow the functionality of the removed  option in a manner
       compatible with the Utility Syntax Guidelines.

       In early proposals there  was  a  limit,  {ED_FILE_MAX},  that  described  the  historical
       limitations  of some ed utilities in their handling of large files; some of these have had
       problems with files larger than 100000 bytes. It was this limitation that prompted much of
       the desire to include a split command in this volume of POSIX.1‐2008. Since this limit was
       removed, this volume of POSIX.1‐2008 requires that implementations document the file  size
       limits  imposed  by  ed  in  the  conformance  document.  The limit {ED_LINE_MAX} was also
       removed; therefore, the global limit {LINE_MAX} is used for input and output lines.

       The manner in which the l command writes non-printable characters was changed to avoid the
       historical  backspace-overstrike  method.  On  video  display terminals, the overstrike is
       ambiguous because most terminals simply replace overstruck characters, making the l format
       not  useful  for  its  intended  purpose of unambiguously understanding the content of the
       line. The historical <backslash>-escapes were also ambiguous. (The string  "a\0011"  could
       represent a line containing those six characters or a line containing the three characters
       'a', a byte with a binary value of 1, and a 1.) In the format required here, a <backslash>
       appearing  in  the  line  is  written as "\\" so that the output is truly unambiguous. The
       method of marking the ends of lines was adopted from the ex editor and is required for any
       line  ending  in  <space> characters; the '$' is placed on all lines so that a real '$' at
       the end of a line cannot be misinterpreted.

       Earlier versions of this standard allowed for implementations with bytes other than  eight
       bits, but this has been modified in this version.

       The  description  of how a NUL is written was removed. The NUL character cannot be in text
       files, and this volume of  POSIX.1‐2008  should  not  dictate  behavior  in  the  case  of
       undefined, erroneous input.

       Unlike  some  of the other editing utilities, the filenames accepted by the E, e, R, and r
       commands are not patterns.

       Early proposals stated that the −p option worked only when standard input  was  associated
       with  a  terminal  device. This has been changed to conform to historical implementations,
       thereby allowing applications to interpose themselves between a user and the ed utility.

       The form of the substitute command that uses the n suffix was limited in  some  historical
       documentation  (where  this  was described incorrectly as ``backreferencing''). This limit
       has been omitted because there is no reason why an editor processing lines  of  {LINE_MAX}
       length  should  have this restriction. The command s/x/X/2047 should be able to substitute
       the 2047th occurrence of 'x' on a line.

       The use of printing commands with printing suffixes (such as pn, lp, and so on)  was  made
       unspecified because BSD-based systems allow this, whereas System V does not.

       Some BSD-based systems exit immediately upon receipt of end-of-file if all of the lines in
       the file have been deleted. Since this volume of POSIX.1‐2008 refers to the q  command  in
       this instance, such behavior is not allowed.

       Some  historical  implementations  returned  exit  status  zero even if command errors had
       occurred; this is not allowed by this volume of POSIX.1‐2008.

       Some historical implementations contained a bug that  allowed  a  single  <period>  to  be
       entered  in  input  mode  as  <backslash>  <period>  <newline>.  This is not allowed by ed
       because there is no  description  of  escaping  any  of  the  characters  in  input  mode;
       <backslash> characters are entered into the buffer exactly as typed. The typical method of
       entering a single <period> has been to precede it with another character and then use  the
       substitute command to delete that character.

       It  is difficult under some modes of some versions of historical operating system terminal
       drivers  to  distinguish  between  an  end-of-file  condition  and  terminal   disconnect.
       POSIX.1‐2008  does  not require implementations to distinguish between the two situations,
       which permits historical implementations of the ed  utility  on  historical  platforms  to
       conform.  Implementations  are encouraged to distinguish between the two, if possible, and
       take appropriate action on terminal disconnect.

       Historically, ed accepted a zero address for the a and r commands in order to insert  text
       at  the  start of the edit buffer. When the buffer was empty the command .= returned zero.
       POSIX.1‐2008 requires conformance to historical practice.

       For consistency with the a and r commands and better  user  functionality,  the  i  and  c
       commands  must also accept an address of 0, in which case 0i is treated as 1i and likewise
       for the c command.

       All of the following are valid addresses:

       +++         Three lines after the current line.

       /pattern/−  One line before the next occurrence of pattern.

       −2          Two lines before the current line.

       3 −−−− 2    Line one (note the intermediate negative address).

       1 2 3       Line six.

       Any number of addresses can  be  provided  to  commands  taking  addresses;  for  example,
       "1,2,3,4,5p"  prints  lines 4 and 5, because two is the greatest valid number of addresses
       accepted by the print command.  This,  in  combination  with  the  <semicolon>  delimiter,
       permits  users  to create commands based on ordered patterns in the file. For example, the
       command "3;/foo/;+2p" will display the first line after line 3 that contains  the  pattern
       foo,  plus  the  next two lines. Note that the address "3;" must still be evaluated before
       being discarded, because the search origin for the "/foo/" command depends on this.

       Historically, ed disallowed address chains,  as  discussed  above,  consisting  solely  of
       <comma>  or  <semicolon> separators; for example, ",,," or ";;;" were considered an error.
       For consistency of address specification, this restriction is removed. The following table
       lists some of the address forms now possible:

                     ┌────────┬───────┬───────┬────────────┬───────────────────────┐
                     │AddressAddr1Addr2StatusComment        │
                     ├────────┼───────┼───────┼────────────┼───────────────────────┤
                     │7,      │   7   │   7   │ Historical │                       │
                     │7,5,    │   5   │   5   │ Historical │                       │
                     │7,5,9   │   5   │   9   │ Historical │                       │
                     │7,9     │   7   │   9   │ Historical │                       │
                     │7,+     │   7   │   8   │ Historical │                       │
                     │,       │   1   │   $   │ Historical │                       │
                     │,7      │   1   │   7   │ Extension  │                       │
                     │,,      │   $   │   $   │ Extension  │                       │
                     │,;      │   $   │   $   │ Extension  │                       │
                     │7;      │   7   │   7   │ Historical │                       │
                     │7;5;    │   5   │   5   │ Historical │                       │
                     │7;5;9   │   5   │   9   │ Historical │                       │
                     │7;5,9   │   5   │   9   │ Historical │                       │
                     │7;$;4   │   $   │   4   │ Historical │ Valid, but erroneous. │
                     │7;9     │   7   │   9   │ Historical │                       │
                     │7;+     │   7   │   8   │ Historical │                       │
                     │;       │   .   │   $   │ Historical │                       │
                     │;7      │   .   │   7   │ Extension  │                       │
                     │;;      │   $   │   $   │ Extension  │                       │
                     │;,      │   $   │   $   │ Extension  │                       │
                     └────────┴───────┴───────┴────────────┴───────────────────────┘
       Historically,  ed accepted the '^' character as an address, in which case it was identical
       to the <hyphen> character. POSIX.1‐2008 does not require or prohibit this behavior.

FUTURE DIRECTIONS

       None.

SEE ALSO

       Section 1.4, Utility Description Defaults, ex, sed, sh, vi

       The Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2008, Table 5-1, Escape  Sequences  and  Associated
       Actions, Chapter 8, Environment Variables, Section 9.3, Basic Regular Expressions, Chapter
       11, General Terminal Interface, Section 12.2, Utility Syntax Guidelines

COPYRIGHT

       Portions of this text are reprinted and  reproduced  in  electronic  form  from  IEEE  Std
       1003.1,  2013  Edition,  Standard  for Information Technology -- Portable Operating System
       Interface (POSIX), The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 7, Copyright (C) 2013  by  the
       Institute  of  Electrical  and  Electronics  Engineers,  Inc and The Open Group.  (This is
       POSIX.1-2008 with the  2013  Technical  Corrigendum  1  applied.)  In  the  event  of  any
       discrepancy  between  this  version and the original IEEE and The Open Group Standard, the
       original IEEE and The Open Group Standard is the referee document. The  original  Standard
       can be obtained online at http://www.unix.org/online.html .

       Any  typographical  or  formatting errors that appear in this page are most likely to have
       been introduced during the conversion of the source files to man page  format.  To  report
       such errors, see https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/reporting_bugs.html .