complex search and replaces (was Re: [OS X TeX] Support for AppleScript please)
William F. Adams
wadams at atlis.com
Tue Dec 7 15:01:07 CET 2004
> On Dec 6, 2004, at 12:32 PM, Alan Curtis wrote:
>
>> You could try a perl one-liner in a Terminal window. For example
>>
>> perl -p -e 's/original/replacement/g' *.tex
>>
>> would replace all occurrences of 'original' with 'replacement' in all
>> the files *.tex. The find and replace strings can be regular
>> expressions and so this can be very powerful.
On Dec 6, 2004, at 7:01 PM, Roger Hart wrote:
> I concur that the best way to script complex search/replaces is with
> perl. I might suggest the following,
>
> perl -i.old -p -e 's/original/replacement/g;
> s/original2/replacement2/g; s/original3/replacement3/g' filename.tex
>
> Here -i.old instructs perl to make a backup of the original file,
> filename.tex.old, and to save the changes under the original filename
> (instead of writing the changes to STDOUT in the Terminal window).
> And you can script a series of perl commands in this manner as one
> command.
>
> I hope this helps,
I've got two books on Perl at home, but they're just not ``clicking''
with me.
I guess I should try harder --- did manage some success with awk (using
it to increment page numbers for an index).
The big thing with bkreplacem is it's a graphical tool which will
manage search and replace sets, so it appeals to the visual side of me.
William
--
William Adams, publishing specialist
voice - 717-731-6707 | Fax - 717-731-6708
www.atlis.com
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