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NAMEstring-replace - replace substrings SYNOPSISstring replace [-a | --all] [-f | --filter] [-i | --ignore-case] DESCRIPTIONstring replace is similar to string match but replaces non-overlapping matching substrings with a replacement string and prints the result. By default, PATTERN is treated as a literal substring to be matched. If -r or --regex is given, PATTERN is interpreted as a Perl-compatible regular expression, and REPLACEMENT can contain C-style escape sequences like t as well as references to capturing groups by number or name as $n or ${n}. If you specify the -f or --filter flag then each input string is printed only if a replacement was done. This is useful where you would otherwise use this idiom: a_cmd | string match pattern | string replace pattern new_pattern. You can instead just write a_cmd | string replace --filter pattern new_pattern. If --max-matches MAX or -m MAX is used, string replace will stop all processing after MAX lines of input have matched the specified pattern. In the event of --filter or -f, this means the output will be MAX lines in length. This can be used as an "early exit" optimization when processing long inputs but expecting a limited and fixed number of outputs that might be found considerably before the input stream has been exhausted. Exit status: 0 if at least one replacement was performed, or 1 otherwise. EXAMPLESReplace Literal Examples>_ string replace is was 'blue is my favorite' blue was my favorite >_ string replace 3rd last 1st 2nd 3rd 1st 2nd last >_ string replace -a ' ' _ 'spaces to underscores' spaces_to_underscores Replace Regex Examples>_ string replace -r -a '[^\d.]+' ' ' '0 one two 3.14 four 5x' 0 3.14 5 >_ string replace -r '(\w+)\s+(\w+)' '$2 $1 $$' 'left right' right left $ >_ string replace -r '\s*newline\s*' '\n' 'put a newline here' put a here COPYRIGHT2024, fish-shell developers
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