• flowingfocus 4 hours ago

    For cases I am not 100% sure I want to replace all occurrences, I prefer scooter: https://github.com/thomasschafer/scooter

    • karmakaze 4 hours ago

      The sed extraction example is more complicated than it needs to be:

          echo "sample with /path/" | sed -E 's|.*(/.*/)|\1|g'
      
      The search/replace separator doesn't have to be '/'.

      I can't see myself using this for a performance bump given that I already know vi, thus sed expressions.

      • Myrmornis 5 hours ago

        Regardless of the appeal to unix philosophy in their docs, sd has never stuck with me because it doesn't natively support replace across a project/ multiple files, and that's what you always want to do. Instead I pipe `rg -R --json` output into a script (rg does do replacement, but only on the stdout, not in-place)

        • mirashii 4 hours ago

          I'm not sure I understand what you're saying. You can pass a list of files to sd, `sd before after **/*.py` to replace in all the python files in your project. That's about as native of a replace across multiple files you could possibly want.

          • assbuttbuttass 4 hours ago

            Use find?

                find -exec sd before after \;
          • jiehong 6 hours ago

            If you use fish, have a look at `string replace` as a built-in and related [0].

            [0]: https://fishshell.com/docs/current/cmds/string.html