What difference does it make matching a word with/without a trailing whitespace?with sed, how can I replace word within a matching line?Sed command that would ignore any commented matchHow to search for the word stored in the hold space with sed?How to delete everything (in every line) in a text file after a pattern of characters(including the pattern)?insert new lines into a csv file obtained via curl on an apiHow to extract delimited blocks of text from a file and have munpack decode them?sed - calling a variable from a file with multilineWhy might sed not make any change to a file?Delete text block with matching search wordsed replace matching line which does not start with #

Little known, relatively unlikely, but scientifically plausible, apocalyptic (or near apocalyptic) events

How to remove strange space symbols in Word

Do scales need to be in alphabetical order?

What does the expression "A Mann!" means

Why no variance term in Bayesian logistic regression?

What's the in-universe reasoning behind sorcerers needing material components?

How can saying a song's name be a copyright violation?

I would say: "You are another teacher", but she is a woman and I am a man

What killed these X2 caps?

Saudi Arabia Transit Visa

How much of data wrangling is a data scientist's job?

Assassin's bullet with mercury

Gatling : Performance testing tool

iPad being using in wall mount battery swollen

What exploit are these user agents trying to use?

Dreadful Dastardly Diseases, or Always Atrocious Ailments

Are there any examples of a variable being normally distributed that is *not* due to the Central Limit Theorem?

Watching something be piped to a file live with tail

Is it possible to create a QR code using text?

What is a romance in Latin?

Should I cover my bicycle overnight while bikepacking?

Detention in 1997

Unlock My Phone! February 2018

How do I know where to place holes on an instrument?



What difference does it make matching a word with/without a trailing whitespace?


with sed, how can I replace word within a matching line?Sed command that would ignore any commented matchHow to search for the word stored in the hold space with sed?How to delete everything (in every line) in a text file after a pattern of characters(including the pattern)?insert new lines into a csv file obtained via curl on an apiHow to extract delimited blocks of text from a file and have munpack decode them?sed - calling a variable from a file with multilineWhy might sed not make any change to a file?Delete text block with matching search wordsed replace matching line which does not start with #













10















I am learning shell-scripting and for that I am using HackerRank. There is a question related to sed on the same site: 'Sed' command #1:




For each line in a given input file, transform the first occurrence of the word 'the' with 'this'. The search and transformation should be strictly case sensitive.




First of all I tried,



sed 's/the/this/'


but in that sample test case failed. Then I tried



sed 's/the /this /'


and it worked. So, the question arises what difference did the whitespaces created? Am I missing something here?










share|improve this question









New contributor




JHA is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • I assume the first version also "worked", but not as you expected. It should have replaced the first occurrence of the letter sequence "the", but you probably looked at the first occurrence of the word " the ".

    – Dubu
    2 days ago











  • Well, in thiseory, yes, in practice, no.

    – Rolf
    yesterday
















10















I am learning shell-scripting and for that I am using HackerRank. There is a question related to sed on the same site: 'Sed' command #1:




For each line in a given input file, transform the first occurrence of the word 'the' with 'this'. The search and transformation should be strictly case sensitive.




First of all I tried,



sed 's/the/this/'


but in that sample test case failed. Then I tried



sed 's/the /this /'


and it worked. So, the question arises what difference did the whitespaces created? Am I missing something here?










share|improve this question









New contributor




JHA is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • I assume the first version also "worked", but not as you expected. It should have replaced the first occurrence of the letter sequence "the", but you probably looked at the first occurrence of the word " the ".

    – Dubu
    2 days ago











  • Well, in thiseory, yes, in practice, no.

    – Rolf
    yesterday














10












10








10


1






I am learning shell-scripting and for that I am using HackerRank. There is a question related to sed on the same site: 'Sed' command #1:




For each line in a given input file, transform the first occurrence of the word 'the' with 'this'. The search and transformation should be strictly case sensitive.




First of all I tried,



sed 's/the/this/'


but in that sample test case failed. Then I tried



sed 's/the /this /'


and it worked. So, the question arises what difference did the whitespaces created? Am I missing something here?










share|improve this question









New contributor




JHA is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I am learning shell-scripting and for that I am using HackerRank. There is a question related to sed on the same site: 'Sed' command #1:




For each line in a given input file, transform the first occurrence of the word 'the' with 'this'. The search and transformation should be strictly case sensitive.




First of all I tried,



sed 's/the/this/'


but in that sample test case failed. Then I tried



sed 's/the /this /'


and it worked. So, the question arises what difference did the whitespaces created? Am I missing something here?







sed whitespace






share|improve this question









New contributor




JHA is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




JHA is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 2 days ago









Kusalananda

139k17260432




139k17260432






New contributor




JHA is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked Mar 31 at 20:33









JHAJHA

575




575




New contributor




JHA is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





JHA is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






JHA is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • I assume the first version also "worked", but not as you expected. It should have replaced the first occurrence of the letter sequence "the", but you probably looked at the first occurrence of the word " the ".

    – Dubu
    2 days ago











  • Well, in thiseory, yes, in practice, no.

    – Rolf
    yesterday


















  • I assume the first version also "worked", but not as you expected. It should have replaced the first occurrence of the letter sequence "the", but you probably looked at the first occurrence of the word " the ".

    – Dubu
    2 days ago











  • Well, in thiseory, yes, in practice, no.

    – Rolf
    yesterday

















I assume the first version also "worked", but not as you expected. It should have replaced the first occurrence of the letter sequence "the", but you probably looked at the first occurrence of the word " the ".

– Dubu
2 days ago





I assume the first version also "worked", but not as you expected. It should have replaced the first occurrence of the letter sequence "the", but you probably looked at the first occurrence of the word " the ".

– Dubu
2 days ago













Well, in thiseory, yes, in practice, no.

– Rolf
yesterday






Well, in thiseory, yes, in practice, no.

– Rolf
yesterday











3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















6














The difference is whether there is a space after the in the input text.

For instance:



With a sentence without a space, no replacement:



$ echo 'theman' | sed 's/the /this /'
theman


With a sentence with a space, works as expected:



$ echo 'the man' | sed 's/the /this /'
this man


With a sentence with another whitespace character,
no replacement will occur:



$ echo -e 'thetman' | sed 's/the /this /'
the man





share|improve this answer










New contributor




BDR is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • I missed that. I had to take "the" as a string. Not a substring.

    – JHA
    Mar 31 at 20:53






  • 1





    @JHA: It also matters at the end of a line. e.g. the word "the" could appear at the end of a line as part of a file with line wrapping, but still be in the middle of a paragraph and thus still be a normal word in an English sentence. the( |$) might be closer to working, if that Extended regex works. Anyway, IDK what you mean "as a string" vs. substring. In both cases it's a substring of the whole line, and your testcases are insufficient to detect the cases where "the " fails. Kusalanada's answer is significantly better, I'd recommend accepting it.

    – Peter Cordes
    2 days ago



















18














It's a cheap and error-prone way of doing word matching.



Note that the with a space after it does not match the word thereby, so matching with a space after the avoids matching that string at the start of words. However, it still does match bathe (if followed by a space), and it does not match the at the end of a line.



To match the word the properly (or any other word), you should not use spaces around the word, as that would prevent you from matching it at the start or end of lines or if it's flanked by any other non-word character, such as any punctuation or tab character, for example.



Instead, use a zero-width word boundary pattern:



sed 's/<the>/this/'


The < and > matches the boundaries before and after the word, i.e. the space between a word character and a non-word character. A word character is generally any character matching [[:alnum:]_] (or [A-Za-z0-9_] in the POSIX locale).



With GNU sed, you could also use b in place of < and >:



sed 's/btheb/this/'





share|improve this answer
































    6














    sed works with regular expressions.
    Using sed 's/the /this /' you just make the space after the part of the matched pattern.



    Using sed 's/the/this/' you replace all occurrences of the with this no matter if a space exists after the.



    In the HackerRank exercise, the result is the same because to replace the with this is logical... you replace just a pro-noun which by default is followed by space (grammar rules).



    You can see the difference if you try for example to capitalize the in the word the theater:



    echo 'the theater' |sed 's/the /THE /g'
    THE theater
    #theater is ignored since the is not followed by space

    echo 'the theater' |sed 's/the/THE/g'
    THE THEater
    #both the are capitalized.





    share|improve this answer

























    • Thank you for the answer. Appreciated :)

      – JHA
      Mar 31 at 21:02











    • "you replace all occurrences" To be clear: Without the g after the replacement text, you replace only the first occurrence.

      – Dubu
      2 days ago











    Your Answer








    StackExchange.ready(function()
    var channelOptions =
    tags: "".split(" "),
    id: "106"
    ;
    initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

    StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
    // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
    if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
    StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
    createEditor();
    );

    else
    createEditor();

    );

    function createEditor()
    StackExchange.prepareEditor(
    heartbeatType: 'answer',
    autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
    convertImagesToLinks: false,
    noModals: true,
    showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
    reputationToPostImages: null,
    bindNavPrevention: true,
    postfix: "",
    imageUploader:
    brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
    contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
    allowUrls: true
    ,
    onDemand: true,
    discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
    ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
    );



    );






    JHA is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









    draft saved

    draft discarded


















    StackExchange.ready(
    function ()
    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2funix.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f509765%2fwhat-difference-does-it-make-matching-a-word-with-without-a-trailing-whitespace%23new-answer', 'question_page');

    );

    Post as a guest















    Required, but never shown

























    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes








    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    6














    The difference is whether there is a space after the in the input text.

    For instance:



    With a sentence without a space, no replacement:



    $ echo 'theman' | sed 's/the /this /'
    theman


    With a sentence with a space, works as expected:



    $ echo 'the man' | sed 's/the /this /'
    this man


    With a sentence with another whitespace character,
    no replacement will occur:



    $ echo -e 'thetman' | sed 's/the /this /'
    the man





    share|improve this answer










    New contributor




    BDR is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.




















    • I missed that. I had to take "the" as a string. Not a substring.

      – JHA
      Mar 31 at 20:53






    • 1





      @JHA: It also matters at the end of a line. e.g. the word "the" could appear at the end of a line as part of a file with line wrapping, but still be in the middle of a paragraph and thus still be a normal word in an English sentence. the( |$) might be closer to working, if that Extended regex works. Anyway, IDK what you mean "as a string" vs. substring. In both cases it's a substring of the whole line, and your testcases are insufficient to detect the cases where "the " fails. Kusalanada's answer is significantly better, I'd recommend accepting it.

      – Peter Cordes
      2 days ago
















    6














    The difference is whether there is a space after the in the input text.

    For instance:



    With a sentence without a space, no replacement:



    $ echo 'theman' | sed 's/the /this /'
    theman


    With a sentence with a space, works as expected:



    $ echo 'the man' | sed 's/the /this /'
    this man


    With a sentence with another whitespace character,
    no replacement will occur:



    $ echo -e 'thetman' | sed 's/the /this /'
    the man





    share|improve this answer










    New contributor




    BDR is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.




















    • I missed that. I had to take "the" as a string. Not a substring.

      – JHA
      Mar 31 at 20:53






    • 1





      @JHA: It also matters at the end of a line. e.g. the word "the" could appear at the end of a line as part of a file with line wrapping, but still be in the middle of a paragraph and thus still be a normal word in an English sentence. the( |$) might be closer to working, if that Extended regex works. Anyway, IDK what you mean "as a string" vs. substring. In both cases it's a substring of the whole line, and your testcases are insufficient to detect the cases where "the " fails. Kusalanada's answer is significantly better, I'd recommend accepting it.

      – Peter Cordes
      2 days ago














    6












    6








    6







    The difference is whether there is a space after the in the input text.

    For instance:



    With a sentence without a space, no replacement:



    $ echo 'theman' | sed 's/the /this /'
    theman


    With a sentence with a space, works as expected:



    $ echo 'the man' | sed 's/the /this /'
    this man


    With a sentence with another whitespace character,
    no replacement will occur:



    $ echo -e 'thetman' | sed 's/the /this /'
    the man





    share|improve this answer










    New contributor




    BDR is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.










    The difference is whether there is a space after the in the input text.

    For instance:



    With a sentence without a space, no replacement:



    $ echo 'theman' | sed 's/the /this /'
    theman


    With a sentence with a space, works as expected:



    $ echo 'the man' | sed 's/the /this /'
    this man


    With a sentence with another whitespace character,
    no replacement will occur:



    $ echo -e 'thetman' | sed 's/the /this /'
    the man






    share|improve this answer










    New contributor




    BDR is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.









    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Mar 31 at 21:31









    G-Man

    13.6k93770




    13.6k93770






    New contributor




    BDR is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.









    answered Mar 31 at 20:44









    BDRBDR

    1035




    1035




    New contributor




    BDR is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.





    New contributor





    BDR is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.






    BDR is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.












    • I missed that. I had to take "the" as a string. Not a substring.

      – JHA
      Mar 31 at 20:53






    • 1





      @JHA: It also matters at the end of a line. e.g. the word "the" could appear at the end of a line as part of a file with line wrapping, but still be in the middle of a paragraph and thus still be a normal word in an English sentence. the( |$) might be closer to working, if that Extended regex works. Anyway, IDK what you mean "as a string" vs. substring. In both cases it's a substring of the whole line, and your testcases are insufficient to detect the cases where "the " fails. Kusalanada's answer is significantly better, I'd recommend accepting it.

      – Peter Cordes
      2 days ago


















    • I missed that. I had to take "the" as a string. Not a substring.

      – JHA
      Mar 31 at 20:53






    • 1





      @JHA: It also matters at the end of a line. e.g. the word "the" could appear at the end of a line as part of a file with line wrapping, but still be in the middle of a paragraph and thus still be a normal word in an English sentence. the( |$) might be closer to working, if that Extended regex works. Anyway, IDK what you mean "as a string" vs. substring. In both cases it's a substring of the whole line, and your testcases are insufficient to detect the cases where "the " fails. Kusalanada's answer is significantly better, I'd recommend accepting it.

      – Peter Cordes
      2 days ago

















    I missed that. I had to take "the" as a string. Not a substring.

    – JHA
    Mar 31 at 20:53





    I missed that. I had to take "the" as a string. Not a substring.

    – JHA
    Mar 31 at 20:53




    1




    1





    @JHA: It also matters at the end of a line. e.g. the word "the" could appear at the end of a line as part of a file with line wrapping, but still be in the middle of a paragraph and thus still be a normal word in an English sentence. the( |$) might be closer to working, if that Extended regex works. Anyway, IDK what you mean "as a string" vs. substring. In both cases it's a substring of the whole line, and your testcases are insufficient to detect the cases where "the " fails. Kusalanada's answer is significantly better, I'd recommend accepting it.

    – Peter Cordes
    2 days ago






    @JHA: It also matters at the end of a line. e.g. the word "the" could appear at the end of a line as part of a file with line wrapping, but still be in the middle of a paragraph and thus still be a normal word in an English sentence. the( |$) might be closer to working, if that Extended regex works. Anyway, IDK what you mean "as a string" vs. substring. In both cases it's a substring of the whole line, and your testcases are insufficient to detect the cases where "the " fails. Kusalanada's answer is significantly better, I'd recommend accepting it.

    – Peter Cordes
    2 days ago














    18














    It's a cheap and error-prone way of doing word matching.



    Note that the with a space after it does not match the word thereby, so matching with a space after the avoids matching that string at the start of words. However, it still does match bathe (if followed by a space), and it does not match the at the end of a line.



    To match the word the properly (or any other word), you should not use spaces around the word, as that would prevent you from matching it at the start or end of lines or if it's flanked by any other non-word character, such as any punctuation or tab character, for example.



    Instead, use a zero-width word boundary pattern:



    sed 's/<the>/this/'


    The < and > matches the boundaries before and after the word, i.e. the space between a word character and a non-word character. A word character is generally any character matching [[:alnum:]_] (or [A-Za-z0-9_] in the POSIX locale).



    With GNU sed, you could also use b in place of < and >:



    sed 's/btheb/this/'





    share|improve this answer





























      18














      It's a cheap and error-prone way of doing word matching.



      Note that the with a space after it does not match the word thereby, so matching with a space after the avoids matching that string at the start of words. However, it still does match bathe (if followed by a space), and it does not match the at the end of a line.



      To match the word the properly (or any other word), you should not use spaces around the word, as that would prevent you from matching it at the start or end of lines or if it's flanked by any other non-word character, such as any punctuation or tab character, for example.



      Instead, use a zero-width word boundary pattern:



      sed 's/<the>/this/'


      The < and > matches the boundaries before and after the word, i.e. the space between a word character and a non-word character. A word character is generally any character matching [[:alnum:]_] (or [A-Za-z0-9_] in the POSIX locale).



      With GNU sed, you could also use b in place of < and >:



      sed 's/btheb/this/'





      share|improve this answer



























        18












        18








        18







        It's a cheap and error-prone way of doing word matching.



        Note that the with a space after it does not match the word thereby, so matching with a space after the avoids matching that string at the start of words. However, it still does match bathe (if followed by a space), and it does not match the at the end of a line.



        To match the word the properly (or any other word), you should not use spaces around the word, as that would prevent you from matching it at the start or end of lines or if it's flanked by any other non-word character, such as any punctuation or tab character, for example.



        Instead, use a zero-width word boundary pattern:



        sed 's/<the>/this/'


        The < and > matches the boundaries before and after the word, i.e. the space between a word character and a non-word character. A word character is generally any character matching [[:alnum:]_] (or [A-Za-z0-9_] in the POSIX locale).



        With GNU sed, you could also use b in place of < and >:



        sed 's/btheb/this/'





        share|improve this answer















        It's a cheap and error-prone way of doing word matching.



        Note that the with a space after it does not match the word thereby, so matching with a space after the avoids matching that string at the start of words. However, it still does match bathe (if followed by a space), and it does not match the at the end of a line.



        To match the word the properly (or any other word), you should not use spaces around the word, as that would prevent you from matching it at the start or end of lines or if it's flanked by any other non-word character, such as any punctuation or tab character, for example.



        Instead, use a zero-width word boundary pattern:



        sed 's/<the>/this/'


        The < and > matches the boundaries before and after the word, i.e. the space between a word character and a non-word character. A word character is generally any character matching [[:alnum:]_] (or [A-Za-z0-9_] in the POSIX locale).



        With GNU sed, you could also use b in place of < and >:



        sed 's/btheb/this/'






        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited 2 days ago

























        answered Mar 31 at 20:53









        KusalanandaKusalananda

        139k17260432




        139k17260432





















            6














            sed works with regular expressions.
            Using sed 's/the /this /' you just make the space after the part of the matched pattern.



            Using sed 's/the/this/' you replace all occurrences of the with this no matter if a space exists after the.



            In the HackerRank exercise, the result is the same because to replace the with this is logical... you replace just a pro-noun which by default is followed by space (grammar rules).



            You can see the difference if you try for example to capitalize the in the word the theater:



            echo 'the theater' |sed 's/the /THE /g'
            THE theater
            #theater is ignored since the is not followed by space

            echo 'the theater' |sed 's/the/THE/g'
            THE THEater
            #both the are capitalized.





            share|improve this answer

























            • Thank you for the answer. Appreciated :)

              – JHA
              Mar 31 at 21:02











            • "you replace all occurrences" To be clear: Without the g after the replacement text, you replace only the first occurrence.

              – Dubu
              2 days ago















            6














            sed works with regular expressions.
            Using sed 's/the /this /' you just make the space after the part of the matched pattern.



            Using sed 's/the/this/' you replace all occurrences of the with this no matter if a space exists after the.



            In the HackerRank exercise, the result is the same because to replace the with this is logical... you replace just a pro-noun which by default is followed by space (grammar rules).



            You can see the difference if you try for example to capitalize the in the word the theater:



            echo 'the theater' |sed 's/the /THE /g'
            THE theater
            #theater is ignored since the is not followed by space

            echo 'the theater' |sed 's/the/THE/g'
            THE THEater
            #both the are capitalized.





            share|improve this answer

























            • Thank you for the answer. Appreciated :)

              – JHA
              Mar 31 at 21:02











            • "you replace all occurrences" To be clear: Without the g after the replacement text, you replace only the first occurrence.

              – Dubu
              2 days ago













            6












            6








            6







            sed works with regular expressions.
            Using sed 's/the /this /' you just make the space after the part of the matched pattern.



            Using sed 's/the/this/' you replace all occurrences of the with this no matter if a space exists after the.



            In the HackerRank exercise, the result is the same because to replace the with this is logical... you replace just a pro-noun which by default is followed by space (grammar rules).



            You can see the difference if you try for example to capitalize the in the word the theater:



            echo 'the theater' |sed 's/the /THE /g'
            THE theater
            #theater is ignored since the is not followed by space

            echo 'the theater' |sed 's/the/THE/g'
            THE THEater
            #both the are capitalized.





            share|improve this answer















            sed works with regular expressions.
            Using sed 's/the /this /' you just make the space after the part of the matched pattern.



            Using sed 's/the/this/' you replace all occurrences of the with this no matter if a space exists after the.



            In the HackerRank exercise, the result is the same because to replace the with this is logical... you replace just a pro-noun which by default is followed by space (grammar rules).



            You can see the difference if you try for example to capitalize the in the word the theater:



            echo 'the theater' |sed 's/the /THE /g'
            THE theater
            #theater is ignored since the is not followed by space

            echo 'the theater' |sed 's/the/THE/g'
            THE THEater
            #both the are capitalized.






            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Mar 31 at 20:57









            JHA

            575




            575










            answered Mar 31 at 20:54









            George VasiliouGeorge Vasiliou

            5,79531030




            5,79531030












            • Thank you for the answer. Appreciated :)

              – JHA
              Mar 31 at 21:02











            • "you replace all occurrences" To be clear: Without the g after the replacement text, you replace only the first occurrence.

              – Dubu
              2 days ago

















            • Thank you for the answer. Appreciated :)

              – JHA
              Mar 31 at 21:02











            • "you replace all occurrences" To be clear: Without the g after the replacement text, you replace only the first occurrence.

              – Dubu
              2 days ago
















            Thank you for the answer. Appreciated :)

            – JHA
            Mar 31 at 21:02





            Thank you for the answer. Appreciated :)

            – JHA
            Mar 31 at 21:02













            "you replace all occurrences" To be clear: Without the g after the replacement text, you replace only the first occurrence.

            – Dubu
            2 days ago





            "you replace all occurrences" To be clear: Without the g after the replacement text, you replace only the first occurrence.

            – Dubu
            2 days ago










            JHA is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









            draft saved

            draft discarded


















            JHA is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.












            JHA is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.











            JHA is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.














            Thanks for contributing an answer to Unix & Linux Stack Exchange!


            • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

            But avoid


            • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

            • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

            To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




            draft saved


            draft discarded














            StackExchange.ready(
            function ()
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2funix.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f509765%2fwhat-difference-does-it-make-matching-a-word-with-without-a-trailing-whitespace%23new-answer', 'question_page');

            );

            Post as a guest















            Required, but never shown





















































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown

































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown







            Popular posts from this blog

            រឿង រ៉ូមេអូ និង ហ្ស៊ុយលីយេ សង្ខេបរឿង តួអង្គ បញ្ជីណែនាំ

            Crop image to path created in TikZ? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)Crop an inserted image?TikZ pictures does not appear in posterImage behind and beyond crop marks?Tikz picture as large as possible on A4 PageTransparency vs image compression dilemmaHow to crop background from image automatically?Image does not cropTikzexternal capturing crop marks when externalizing pgfplots?How to include image path that contains a dollar signCrop image with left size given

            Romeo and Juliet ContentsCharactersSynopsisSourcesDate and textThemes and motifsCriticism and interpretationLegacyScene by sceneSee alsoNotes and referencesSourcesExternal linksNavigation menu"Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–"10.2307/28710160037-3222287101610.1093/res/II.5.31910.2307/45967845967810.2307/2869925286992510.1525/jams.1982.35.3.03a00050"Dada Masilo: South African dancer who breaks the rules"10.1093/res/os-XV.57.1610.2307/28680942868094"Sweet Sorrow: Mann-Korman's Romeo and Juliet Closes Sept. 5 at MN's Ordway"the original10.2307/45957745957710.1017/CCOL0521570476.009"Ram Leela box office collections hit massive Rs 100 crore, pulverises prediction"Archived"Broadway Revival of Romeo and Juliet, Starring Orlando Bloom and Condola Rashad, Will Close Dec. 8"Archived10.1075/jhp.7.1.04hon"Wherefore art thou, Romeo? To make us laugh at Navy Pier"the original10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.O006772"Ram-leela Review Roundup: Critics Hail Film as Best Adaptation of Romeo and Juliet"Archived10.2307/31946310047-77293194631"Romeo and Juliet get Twitter treatment""Juliet's Nurse by Lois Leveen""Romeo and Juliet: Orlando Bloom's Broadway Debut Released in Theaters for Valentine's Day"Archived"Romeo and Juliet Has No Balcony"10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.O00778110.2307/2867423286742310.1076/enst.82.2.115.959510.1080/00138380601042675"A plague o' both your houses: error in GCSE exam paper forces apology""Juliet of the Five O'Clock Shadow, and Other Wonders"10.2307/33912430027-4321339124310.2307/28487440038-7134284874410.2307/29123140149-661129123144728341M"Weekender Guide: Shakespeare on The Drive""balcony"UK public library membership"romeo"UK public library membership10.1017/CCOL9780521844291"Post-Zionist Critique on Israel and the Palestinians Part III: Popular Culture"10.2307/25379071533-86140377-919X2537907"Capulets and Montagues: UK exam board admit mixing names up in Romeo and Juliet paper"Istoria Novellamente Ritrovata di Due Nobili Amanti2027/mdp.390150822329610820-750X"GCSE exam error: Board accidentally rewrites Shakespeare"10.2307/29176390149-66112917639"Exam board apologises after error in English GCSE paper which confused characters in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet""From Mariotto and Ganozza to Romeo and Guilietta: Metamorphoses of a Renaissance Tale"10.2307/37323537323510.2307/2867455286745510.2307/28678912867891"10 Questions for Taylor Swift"10.2307/28680922868092"Haymarket Theatre""The Zeffirelli Way: Revealing Talk by Florentine Director""Michael Smuin: 1938-2007 / Prolific dance director had showy career"The Life and Art of Edwin BoothRomeo and JulietRomeo and JulietRomeo and JulietRomeo and JulietEasy Read Romeo and JulietRomeo and Julieteeecb12003684p(data)4099369-3n8211610759dbe00d-a9e2-41a3-b2c1-977dd692899302814385X313670221313670221