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Comment: added the :w option to the vim line to indicate a save. Also added another way via col < infile > outfile command to remove M$. Sorry about my formatting.
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All these are from the [[http://www.student.northpark.edu/pemente/sed/sed1line.txt|sed one-liners page]]: {{{ sed 's/.$//' dosfile # assumes that all lines end with CR/LF sed 's/^M$//' dosfile # in bash/tcsh, press Ctrl-V then Ctrl-M sed 's/\x0D$//' dosfile # GNUism - does not work with Unix sed! }}} If you want to remove all CRs regardless of whether they are at the end of a line, you can use {{{tr}}}: |
To remove them from a file, `ex` is a good standard way to do it: |
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tr -d '\r' < dosfile | ex -sc $'%s/\r$//e|x' file |
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If you want to use the second {{{sed}}} example above, but without embedding a literal CR into your script: {{{ sed $'s/\r$//' dosfile # BASH only }}} All of the previous examples write the modified file to standard output. Redirect the output to a new file, and then {{{mv}}} it over top of the original. |
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---- Another way to check it: {{{ file yourscript }}} The output tells you whether the ASCII text has some CR, if that's the case. Note: this is only true on GNU/Linux. On other operating systems, the result of `file` is unpredictable, except that it should contain the word "text" somewhere in the output if the result "kind of looks like a text file of some sort, maybe". {{{ imadev:~$ printf 'DOS\r\nline endings\r\n' > foo imadev:~$ file foo foo: commands text arc3:~$ file foo foo: ASCII text, with CRLF line terminators }}} And another way to fix it: {{{ nano -w yourscript }}} Type Ctrl-O and before confirming, type Alt-D (DOS) or Alt-M (Mac) to change the format. And another way to fix it: {{{ dos2unix filename }}} |
How do I convert a file from DOS format to UNIX format (remove CRs from CR-LF line terminators)?
Carriage return characters (CRs) are used in line ending markers on some systems. There are three different kinds of line endings in common use:
- Unix systems use Line Feeds (LFs) only.
- MS-DOS and Windows systems use CR-LF pairs.
- Old Macintosh systems use CRs only.
If you're running a script on a Unix system, the line endings need to be Unix ones (LFs only), or you will have problems. You can check the kind of line endings in use by running:
cat -e yourscript
If you see something like this:
command^M$ ^M$ another command^M$
then you need to remove the CRs. There are a plethora of ways to do this.
To remove them from a file, ex is a good standard way to do it:
ex -sc $'%s/\r$//e|x' file
There are many more ways:
Some systems have a dos2unix command which can do this. Or recode, or fromdos.
You can also use col <input.txt > output.txt
In vim, you can use :set fileformat=unix to do it and save it with a ":w".
- You can use Perl:
perl -pi -e 's/\r\n/\n/' filename
Another way to check it:
file yourscript
The output tells you whether the ASCII text has some CR, if that's the case. Note: this is only true on GNU/Linux. On other operating systems, the result of file is unpredictable, except that it should contain the word "text" somewhere in the output if the result "kind of looks like a text file of some sort, maybe".
imadev:~$ printf 'DOS\r\nline endings\r\n' > foo imadev:~$ file foo foo: commands text arc3:~$ file foo foo: ASCII text, with CRLF line terminators
And another way to fix it:
nano -w yourscript
Type Ctrl-O and before confirming, type Alt-D (DOS) or Alt-M (Mac) to change the format.
And another way to fix it:
dos2unix filename