I need to edit a few text files (an output from sar) and convert them into CSV files.
I need to change every whitespace (maybe it's a tab between the numbers in the output) using sed or awk functions (an easy shell script in Linux).
Can anyone help me? Every command I used didn't change the file at all; I tried gsub.
tr ' ' ',' <input >output
Substitutes each space with a comma, if you need you can make a pass with the -s flag (squeeze repeats), that replaces each input sequence of a repeated character that is listed in SET1 (the blank space) with a single occurrence of that character.
Use of squeeze repeats used to after substitute tabs:
tr -s '\t' <input | tr '\t' ',' >output
Try something like:
sed 's/[:space:]+/,/g' orig.txt > modified.txt
The character class [:space:] will match all whitespace (spaces, tabs, etc.). If you just want to replace a single character, eg. just space, use that only.
EDIT: Actually [:space:] includes carriage return, so this may not do what you want. The following will replace tabs and spaces.
sed 's/[:blank:]+/,/g' orig.txt > modified.txt
as will
sed 's/[\t ]+/,/g' orig.txt > modified.txt
In all of this, you need to be careful that the items in your file that are separated by whitespace don't contain their own whitespace that you want to keep, eg. two words.
without looking at your input file, only a guess
awk '{$1=$1}1' OFS=","
redirect to another file and rename as needed
What about something like this :
cat texte.txt | sed -e 's/\s/,/g' > texte-new.txt
(Yes, with some useless catting and piping ; could also use < to read from the file directly, I suppose -- used cat first to output the content of the file, and only after, I added sed to my command-line)
EDIT : as #ghostdog74 pointed out in a comment, there's definitly no need for thet cat/pipe ; you can give the name of the file to sed :
sed -e 's/\s/,/g' texte.txt > texte-new.txt
If "texte.txt" is this way :
$ cat texte.txt
this is a text
in which I want to replace
spaces by commas
You'll get a "texte-new.txt" that'll look like this :
$ cat texte-new.txt
this,is,a,text
in,which,I,want,to,replace
spaces,by,commas
I wouldn't go just replacing the old file by the new one (could be done with sed -i, if I remember correctly ; and as #ghostdog74 said, this one would accept creating the backup on the fly) : keeping might be wise, as a security measure (even if it means having to rename it to something like "texte-backup.txt")
This command should work:
sed "s/\s/,/g" < infile.txt > outfile.txt
Note that you have to redirect the output to a new file. The input file is not changed in place.
sed can do this:
sed 's/[\t ]/,/g' input.file
That will send to the console,
sed -i 's/[\t ]/,/g' input.file
will edit the file in-place
Here's a Perl script which will edit the files in-place:
perl -i.bak -lpe 's/\s+/,/g' files*
Consecutive whitespace is converted to a single comma.
Each input file is moved to .bak
These command-line options are used:
-i.bak edit in-place and make .bak copies
-p loop around every line of the input file, automatically print the line
-l removes newlines before processing, and adds them back in afterwards
-e execute the perl code
If you want to replace an arbitrary sequence of blank characters (tab, space) with one comma, use the following:
sed 's/[\t ]+/,/g' input_file > output_file
or
sed -r 's/[[:blank:]]+/,/g' input_file > output_file
If some of your input lines include leading space characters which are redundant and don't need to be converted to commas, then first you need to get rid of them, and then convert the remaining blank characters to commas. For such case, use the following:
sed 's/ +//' input_file | sed 's/[\t ]+/,/g' > output_file
This worked for me.
sed -e 's/\s\+/,/g' input.txt >> output.csv
Related
I have a text file like
some
important
content
goes here
---from here--
some
unwanted content
I am trying to delete all lines after ---from here-- including ---from here--. That is, the desired output is
some
important
content
goes here
I tried sed '1,/---from here--/!d' input.txt but it's not removing the ---from here-- part. If I use sed '/---from here--.*/d' input.txt, it's only removing ---from here-- text.
How can I remove lines after a pattern including that pattern?
EDIT
I can achieve it by doing the first operation and pipe its output to second, like sed '1,/---from here--/!d' input.txt | sed '/---from here--.*/d' > outputput.txt.
Is there a single step solution?
Another approach with sed:
sed '/---from here--/,$d' file
The d(delete) command is applied to all lines from first line containing ---from here-- up to the end of file($)
Another awk approach:
awk '/---from here--/{exit}1' file
If you have GNU awk 4.1.0+, you can add -i inplace to change the file in-place.
Otherwise appened | tee file to change the file in-place.
I'm not positive, but I believe this will work:
sed -n '/---from here--/q; p' file
The q command tells sed to quit processing input lines after matching a given line.
Could you please try following(in case you are ok with awk).
awk '/--from here--/{found_from=1} !found_from{print}' Input_file
You can try Perl
perl -ne ' $x++ if /---from here--/; print if !$x '
using your inputs..
$ cat johnykutty.txt
some
important
content
goes here
---from here--
some
unwanted content
$ perl -ne ' $x++ if /---from here--/; print if !$x ' johnykutty.txt
some
important
content
goes here
$
I have a file "test.txt" with the lines below and also lot bunch of extra stuff after the "version"
soainfra_metrics{metric_group="sca_composite",partition="test",is_active="true",state="on",is_default="true",composite="test123"} map:stats version:1.0
soainfra_metrics{metric_group="sca_composite",partition="gello",is_active="true",state="on",is_default="true",composite="test234"} map:stats version:1.8
soainfra_metrics{metric_group="sca_composite",partition="bolo",is_active="true",state="on",is_default="true",composite="3415"} map:stats version:3.1
soainfra_metrics{metric_group="sca_composite",partition="solo",is_active="true",state="on",is_default="true",composite="hji"} map:stats version:1.1
I tried:
egrep -r 'partition|is_active|state|is_default|composite' test.txt
It's displaying every line, but I need only specific mentioned fields like this below,ignoring rest of the data/stuff or lines
in a nut shell, i want to display only these fields from a line not the rest
partition="test",is_active="true",state="on",is_default="true",composite="test123"
partition="gello",is_active="true",state="on",is_default="true",composite="test234"
partition="bolo",is_active="true",state="on",is_default="true",composite="3415"
partition="solo",is_active="true",state="on",is_default="true",composite="hji"
If your version of grep supports Perl-style regular expressions, then I'd use this:
grep -oP '.*?,\K[^}]+' file
It removes everything up to the first comma (\K kills any previous output) and prints everything up to the }.
Alternatively, using awk:
awk -F'}' '{ sub(/[^,]+,/, ""); print $1 }' file
This sets the field separator to } so the part you're interested in is the first field. It then uses sub to remove the part up to the first comma.
For completeness, you could also use sed:
sed 's/[^,]*,\([^}]*\).*/\1/' file
This captures the part after the first , up to the } and replaces the content of the line with it.
After the grep to pick out the lines you want, use sed to edit the lines:
sed 's/.*\(partition[^}]*\)} map.*/\1/'
This means: "whenever you see anything .*, followed by partition and
any number of non-}, then } map and anything else, grab the part
from partition up to but not including the brace \(...\) as group 1.
The replacement text is just group 1 \1.
Use a pipe | to connect the output of egrep to the input of sed:
egrep ... | sed ...
As far as i understood your file might have more lines you don't want to see, so i would use:
sed -n 's/.*\(partition.*\)}.*/\1/p' file
we use -n p to show only lines where we made substitution. The substitution part just gets the part of the line you need substituting the whole line with the pattern.
This might work for you (GNU sed):
sed -r 's/(partition|is_active|state|is_default|composite)="[^"]*"/\n&\n/g;s/[^\n]*\n([^\n]*)\n[^\n]*/\1,/g;s/,$//' file
Treat the problem as if it were a "decomposed club sandwich". Identify the fillings, remove the bread and tidy up.
Say I have some arbitrary multi-line text file:
sometext
moretext
lastline
How can I remove only the last character (the e, not the newline or null) of the file without making the text file invalid?
A simpler approach (outputs to stdout, doesn't update the input file):
sed '$ s/.$//' somefile
$ is a Sed address that matches the last input line only, thus causing the following function call (s/.$//) to be executed on the last line only.
s/.$// replaces the last character on the (in this case last) line with an empty string; i.e., effectively removes the last char. (before the newline) on the line.
. matches any character on the line, and following it with $ anchors the match to the end of the line; note how the use of $ in this regular expression is conceptually related, but technically distinct from the previous use of $ as a Sed address.
Example with stdin input (assumes Bash, Ksh, or Zsh):
$ sed '$ s/.$//' <<< $'line one\nline two'
line one
line tw
To update the input file too (do not use if the input file is a symlink):
sed -i '$ s/.$//' somefile
Note:
On macOS, you'd have to use -i '' instead of just -i; for an overview of the pitfalls associated with -i, see the bottom half of this answer.
If you need to process very large input files and/or performance / disk usage are a concern and you're using GNU utilities (Linux), see ImHere's helpful answer.
truncate
truncate -s-1 file
Removes one (-1) character from the end of the same file. Exactly as a >> will append to the same file.
The problem with this approach is that it doesn't retain a trailing newline if it existed.
The solution is:
if [ -n "$(tail -c1 file)" ] # if the file has not a trailing new line.
then
truncate -s-1 file # remove one char as the question request.
else
truncate -s-2 file # remove the last two characters
echo "" >> file # add the trailing new line back
fi
This works because tail takes the last byte (not char).
It takes almost no time even with big files.
Why not sed
The problem with a sed solution like sed '$ s/.$//' file is that it reads the whole file first (taking a long time with large files), then you need a temporary file (of the same size as the original):
sed '$ s/.$//' file > tempfile
rm file; mv tempfile file
And then move the tempfile to replace the file.
Here's another using ex, which I find not as cryptic as the sed solution:
printf '%s\n' '$' 's/.$//' wq | ex somefile
The $ goes to the last line, the s deletes the last character, and wq is the well known (to vi users) write+quit.
After a whole bunch of playing around with different strategies (and avoiding sed -i or perl), the best way i found to do this was with:
sed '$! { P; D; }; s/.$//' somefile
If the goal is to remove the last character in the last line, this awk should do:
awk '{a[NR]=$0} END {for (i=1;i<NR;i++) print a[i];sub(/.$/,"",a[NR]);print a[NR]}' file
sometext
moretext
lastlin
It store all data into an array, then print it out and change last line.
Just a remark: sed will temporarily remove the file.
So if you are tailing the file, you'll get a "No such file or directory" warning until you reissue the tail command.
EDITED ANSWER
I created a script and put your text inside on my Desktop. this test file is saved as "old_file.txt"
sometext
moretext
lastline
Afterwards I wrote a small script to take the old file and eliminate the last character in the last line
#!/bin/bash
no_of_new_line_characters=`wc '/root/Desktop/old_file.txt'|cut -d ' ' -f2`
let "no_of_lines=no_of_new_line_characters+1"
sed -n 1,"$no_of_new_line_characters"p '/root/Desktop/old_file.txt' > '/root/Desktop/my_new_file'
sed -n "$no_of_lines","$no_of_lines"p '/root/Desktop/old_file.txt'|sed 's/.$//g' >> '/root/Desktop/my_new_file'
opening the new_file I created, showed the output as follows:
sometext
moretext
lastlin
I apologize for my previous answer (wasn't reading carefully)
sed 's/.$//' filename | tee newFilename
This should do your job.
A couple perl solutions, for comparison/reference:
(echo 1a; echo 2b) | perl -e '$_=join("",<>); s/.$//; print'
(echo 1a; echo 2b) | perl -e 'while(<>){ if(eof) {s/.$//}; print }'
I find the first read-whole-file-into-memory approach can be generally quite useful (less so for this particular problem). You can now do regex's which span multiple lines, for example to combine every 3 lines of a certain format into 1 summary line.
For this problem, truncate would be faster and the sed version is shorter to type. Note that truncate requires a file to operate on, not a stream. Normally I find sed to lack the power of perl and I much prefer the extended-regex / perl-regex syntax. But this problem has a nice sed solution.
I have a text file which has a particular line something like
sometext sometext sometext TEXT_TO_BE_REPLACED sometext sometext sometext
I need to replace the whole line above with
This line is removed by the admin.
The search keyword is TEXT_TO_BE_REPLACED
I need to write a shell script for this. How can I achieve this using sed?
You can use the change command to replace the entire line, and the -i flag to make the changes in-place. For example, using GNU sed:
sed -i '/TEXT_TO_BE_REPLACED/c\This line is removed by the admin.' /tmp/foo
You need to use wildcards (.*) before and after to replace the whole line:
sed 's/.*TEXT_TO_BE_REPLACED.*/This line is removed by the admin./'
The Answer above:
sed -i '/TEXT_TO_BE_REPLACED/c\This line is removed by the admin.' /tmp/foo
Works fine if the replacement string/line is not a variable.
The issue is that on Redhat 5 the \ after the c escapes the $. A double \\ did not work either (at least on Redhat 5).
Through hit and trial, I discovered that the \ after the c is redundant if your replacement string/line is only a single line. So I did not use \ after the c, used a variable as a single replacement line and it was joy.
The code would look something like:
sed -i "/TEXT_TO_BE_REPLACED/c $REPLACEMENT_TEXT_STRING" /tmp/foo
Note the use of double quotes instead of single quotes.
The accepted answer did not work for me for several reasons:
my version of sed does not like -i with a zero length extension
the syntax of the c\ command is weird and I couldn't get it to work
I didn't realize some of my issues are coming from unescaped slashes
So here is the solution I came up with which I think should work for most cases:
function escape_slashes {
sed 's/\//\\\//g'
}
function change_line {
local OLD_LINE_PATTERN=$1; shift
local NEW_LINE=$1; shift
local FILE=$1
local NEW=$(echo "${NEW_LINE}" | escape_slashes)
# FIX: No space after the option i.
sed -i.bak '/'"${OLD_LINE_PATTERN}"'/s/.*/'"${NEW}"'/' "${FILE}"
mv "${FILE}.bak" /tmp/
}
So the sample usage to fix the problem posed:
change_line "TEXT_TO_BE_REPLACED" "This line is removed by the admin." yourFile
All of the answers provided so far assume that you know something about the text to be replaced which makes sense, since that's what the OP asked. I'm providing an answer that assumes you know nothing about the text to be replaced and that there may be a separate line in the file with the same or similar content that you do not want to be replaced. Furthermore, I'm assuming you know the line number of the line to be replaced.
The following examples demonstrate the removing or changing of text by specific line numbers:
# replace line 17 with some replacement text and make changes in file (-i switch)
# the "-i" switch indicates that we want to change the file. Leave it out if you'd
# just like to see the potential changes output to the terminal window.
# "17s" indicates that we're searching line 17
# ".*" indicates that we want to change the text of the entire line
# "REPLACEMENT-TEXT" is the new text to put on that line
# "PATH-TO-FILE" tells us what file to operate on
sed -i '17s/.*/REPLACEMENT-TEXT/' PATH-TO-FILE
# replace specific text on line 3
sed -i '3s/TEXT-TO-REPLACE/REPLACEMENT-TEXT/'
for manipulation of config files
i came up with this solution inspired by skensell answer
configLine [searchPattern] [replaceLine] [filePath]
it will:
create the file if not exists
replace the whole line (all lines) where searchPattern matched
add replaceLine on the end of the file if pattern was not found
Function:
function configLine {
local OLD_LINE_PATTERN=$1; shift
local NEW_LINE=$1; shift
local FILE=$1
local NEW=$(echo "${NEW_LINE}" | sed 's/\//\\\//g')
touch "${FILE}"
sed -i '/'"${OLD_LINE_PATTERN}"'/{s/.*/'"${NEW}"'/;h};${x;/./{x;q100};x}' "${FILE}"
if [[ $? -ne 100 ]] && [[ ${NEW_LINE} != '' ]]
then
echo "${NEW_LINE}" >> "${FILE}"
fi
}
the crazy exit status magic comes from https://stackoverflow.com/a/12145797/1262663
In my makefile I use this:
#sed -i '/.*Revision:.*/c\'"`svn info -R main.cpp | awk '/^Rev/'`"'' README.md
PS: DO NOT forget that the -i changes actually the text in the file... so if the pattern you defined as "Revision" will change, you will also change the pattern to replace.
Example output:
Abc-Project written by John Doe
Revision: 1190
So if you set the pattern "Revision: 1190" it's obviously not the same as you defined them as "Revision:" only...
bash-4.1$ new_db_host="DB_HOSTNAME=good replaced with 122.334.567.90"
bash-4.1$
bash-4.1$ sed -i "/DB_HOST/c $new_db_host" test4sed
vim test4sed
'
'
'
DB_HOSTNAME=good replaced with 122.334.567.90
'
it works fine
To do this without relying on any GNUisms such as -i without a parameter or c without a linebreak:
sed '/TEXT_TO_BE_REPLACED/c\
This line is removed by the admin.
' infile > tmpfile && mv tmpfile infile
In this (POSIX compliant) form of the command
c\
text
text can consist of one or multiple lines, and linebreaks that should become part of the replacement have to be escaped:
c\
line1\
line2
s/x/y/
where s/x/y/ is a new sed command after the pattern space has been replaced by the two lines
line1
line2
cat find_replace | while read pattern replacement ; do
sed -i "/${pattern}/c ${replacement}" file
done
find_replace file contains 2 columns, c1 with pattern to match, c2 with replacement, the sed loop replaces each line conatining one of the pattern of variable 1
To replace whole line containing a specified string with the content of that line
Text file:
Row: 0 last_time_contacted=0, display_name=Mozart, _id=100, phonebook_bucket_alt=2
Row: 1 last_time_contacted=0, display_name=Bach, _id=101, phonebook_bucket_alt=2
Single string:
$ sed 's/.* display_name=\([[:alpha:]]\+\).*/\1/'
output:
100
101
Multiple strings delimited by white-space:
$ sed 's/.* display_name=\([[:alpha:]]\+\).* _id=\([[:digit:]]\+\).*/\1 \2/'
output:
Mozart 100
Bach 101
Adjust regex to meet your needs
[:alpha] and [:digit:]
are Character Classes and Bracket Expressions
This worked for me:
sed -i <extension> 's/.*<Line to be replaced>.*/<New line to be added>/'
An example is:
sed -i .bak -e '7s/.*version.*/ version = "4.33.0"/'
-i: The extension for the backup file after the replacement. In this case, it is .bak.
-e: The sed script. In this case, it is '7s/.*version.*/ version = "4.33.0"/'. If you want to use a sed file use the -f flag
s: The line number in the file to be replaced. In this case, it is 7s which means line 7.
Note:
If you want to do a recursive find and replace with sed then you can grep to the beginning of the command:
grep -rl --exclude-dir=<directory-to-exclude> --include=\*<Files to include> "<Line to be replaced>" ./ | sed -i <extension> 's/.*<Line to be replaced>.*/<New line to be added>/'
The question asks for solutions using sed, but if that's not a hard requirement then there is another option which might be a wiser choice.
The accepted answer suggests sed -i and describes it as replacing the file in-place, but -i doesn't really do that and instead does the equivalent of sed pattern file > tmp; mv tmp file, preserving ownership and modes. This is not ideal in many circumstances. In general I do not recommend running sed -i non-interactively as part of an automatic process--it's like setting a bomb with a fuse of an unknown length. Sooner or later it will blow up on someone.
To actually edit a file "in place" and replace a line matching a pattern with some other content you would be well served to use an actual text editor. This is how it's done with ed, the standard text editor.
printf '%s\n' '/TEXT_TO_BE_REPLACED/' d i 'This line is removed by the admin' . w q | \
ed -s /tmp/foo > /dev/null
Note that this only replaces the first matching line, which is what the question implied was wanted. This is a material difference from most of the other answers.
That disadvantage aside, there are some advantages to using ed over sed:
You can replace the match with one or multiple lines without any extra effort.
The replacement text can be arbitrarily complex without needing any escaping to protect it.
Most importantly, the original file is opened, modified, and saved. A copy is not made.
How it works
How it works:
printf will use its first argument as a format string and print each of its other arguments using that format, effectively meaning that each argument to printf becomes a line of output, which is all sent to ed on stdin.
The first line is a regex pattern match which causes ed to move its notion of "the current line" forward to the first line that matches (if there is no match the current line is set to the last line of the file).
The next is the d command which instructs ed to delete the entire current line.
After that is the i command which puts ed into insert mode;
after that all subsequent lines entered are written to the current line (or additional lines if there are any embedded newlines). This means you can expand a variable (e.g. "$foo") containing multiple lines here and it will insert all of them.
Insert mode ends when ed sees a line consisting of .
The w command writes the content of the file to disk, and
the q command quits.
The ed command is given the -s switch, putting it into silent mode so it doesn't echo any information as it runs,
the file to be edited is given as an argument to ed,
and, finally, stdout is thrown away to prevent the line matching the regex from being printed.
Some Unix-like systems may (inappropriately) ship without an ed installed, but may still ship with an ex; if so you can simply use it instead. If have vim but no ex or ed you can use vim -e instead. If you have only standard vi but no ex or ed, complain to your sysadmin.
It is as similar to above one..
sed 's/[A-Za-z0-9]*TEXT_TO_BE_REPLACED.[A-Za-z0-9]*/This line is removed by the admin./'
Below command is working for me. Which is working with variables
sed -i "/\<$E\>/c $D" "$B"
I very often use regex to extract data from files I just used that to replace the literal quote \" with // nothing :-)
cat file.csv | egrep '^\"([0-9]{1,3}\.[0-9]{1,3}\.)' | sed s/\"//g | cut -d, -f1 > list.txt
I have the following data, and I need to put it all into one line.
I have this:
22791
;
14336
;
22821
;
34653
;
21491
;
25522
;
33238
;
I need this:
22791;14336;22821;34653;21491;25522;33238;
EDIT
None of these commands is working perfectly.
Most of them let the data look like this:
22791
;14336
;22821
;34653
;21491
;25522
tr --delete '\n' < yourfile.txt
tr -d '\n' < yourfile.txt
Edit:
If none of the commands posted here are working, then you have something other than a newline separating your fields. Possibly you have DOS/Windows line endings in the file (although I would expect the Perl solutions to work even in that case)?
Try:
tr -d "\n\r" < yourfile.txt
If that doesn't work then you're going to have to inspect your file more closely (e.g. in a hex editor) to find out what characters are actually in there that you want to remove.
tr -d '\n' < file.txt
Or
awk '{ printf "%s", $0 }' file.txt
Or
sed ':a;N;$!ba;s/\n//g' file.txt
This page here has a bunch of other methods to remove newlines.
edited to remove feline abuse :)
perl -p -i -e 's/\R//g;' filename
Must do the job.
paste -sd "" file.txt
Expanding on a previous answer, this removes all new lines and saves the result to a new file (thanks to #tripleee):
tr -d '\n' < yourfile.txt > yourfile2.txt
Which is better than a "useless cat" (see comments):
cat file.txt | tr -d '\n' > file2.txt
Also useful for getting rid of new lines at the end of the file, e.g. created by using echo blah > file.txt.
Note that the destination filename is different, important, otherwise you'll wipe out the original content!
You can edit the file in vim:
$ vim inputfile
:%s/\n//g
use
head -n 1 filename | od -c
to figure WHAT is the offending character.
then use
tr -d '\n' <filename
for LF
tr -d '\r\n' <filename
for CRLF
Use sed with POSIX classes
This will remove all lines containing only whitespace (spaces & tabs)
sed '/^[[:space:]]*$/d'
Just take whatever you are working with and pipe it to that
Example
cat filename | sed '/^[[:space:]]*$/d'
Using man 1 ed:
# cf. http://wiki.bash-hackers.org/doku.php?id=howto:edit-ed
ed -s file <<< $'1,$j\n,p' # print to stdout
ed -s file <<< $'1,$j\nwq' # in-place edit
xargs consumes newlines as well (but adds a final trailing newline):
xargs < file.txt | tr -d ' '
Nerd fact: use ASCII instead.
tr -d '\012' < filename.extension
(Edited cause i didn't see the friggin' answer that had same solution, only difference was that mine had ASCII)
Using the gedit text editor (3.18.3)
Click Search
Click Find and Replace...
Enter \n\s into Find field
Leave Replace with blank (nothing)
Check Regular expression box
Click the Find button
Note: this doesn't exactly address the OP's original, 7 year old problem but should help some noob linux users (like me) who find their way here from the SE's with similar "how do I get my text all on one line" questions.
Was having the same case today, super easy in vim or nvim, you can use gJ to join lines. For your use case, just do
99gJ
this will join all your 99 lines. You can adjust the number 99 as need according to how many lines to join. If just join 1 line, then only gJ is good enough.
$ perl -0777 -pe 's/\n+//g' input >output
$ perl -0777 -pe 'tr/\n//d' input >output
If the data is in file.txt, then:
echo $(<file.txt) | tr -d ' '
The '$(<file.txt)' reads the file and gives the contents as a series of words which 'echo' then echoes with a space between them. The 'tr' command then deletes any spaces:
22791;14336;22821;34653;21491;25522;33238;
Assuming you only want to keep the digits and the semicolons, the following should do the trick assuming there are no major encoding issues, though it will also remove the very last "newline":
$ tr -cd ";0-9"
You can easily modify the above to include other characters, e.g. if you want to retain decimal points, commas, etc.
I usually get this usecase when I'm copying a code snippet from a file and I want to paste it into a console without adding unnecessary new lines, I ended up doing a bash alias
( i called it oneline if you are curious )
xsel -b -o | tr -d '\n' | tr -s ' ' | xsel -b -i
xsel -b -o reads my clipboard
tr -d '\n' removes new lines
tr -s ' ' removes recurring spaces
xsel -b -i pushes this back to my clipboard
after that I would paste the new contents of the clipboard into oneline in a console or whatever.
I would do it with awk, e.g.
awk '/[0-9]+/ { a = a $0 ";" } END { print a }' file.txt
(a disadvantage is that a is "accumulated" in memory).
EDIT
Forgot about printf! So also
awk '/[0-9]+/ { printf "%s;", $0 }' file.txt
or likely better, what it was already given in the other ans using awk.
You are missing the most obvious and fast answer especially when you need to do this in GUI in order to fix some weird word-wrap.
Open gedit
Then Ctrl + H, then put in the Find textbox \n and in Replace with an empty space then fill checkbox Regular expression and voila.
To also remove the trailing newline at the end of the file
python -c "s=open('filename','r').read();open('filename', 'w').write(s.replace('\n',''))"
fastest way I found:
open vim by doing this in your commandline
vim inputfile
press ":" and input the following command to remove all newlines
:%s/\n//g
Input this to also remove spaces incase some characters were spaces :%s/ //g
make sure to save by writing to the file with
:w
The same format can be used to remove any other characters, you can use a website like this
https://apps.timwhitlock.info/unicode/inspect
to figure out what character you're missing
You can also use this to figure out other characters you can't see and they have a tool as well
Tool to learn of other invisible characters