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I want to programmatically edit file content using windows command line (cmd.exe). In *nix there is sed for this tasks. Are there any useful native equivalents (cmd or ps) in windows?

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  • 1
    What do you mean by "native" ??? Installable to work in cmd.exe, or to work without installation whatsoever? If the former, see GnuWin32 ref'd below; if the latter, no. No pre-installed native sed for windows. May 26, 2009 at 13:10
  • 9
    By native I meant solution which runs on all windows without installing additional stuff. May 26, 2009 at 17:34
  • 2
    Leave cmd.exe behind and use PowerShell instead. Jan 1, 2015 at 14:59
  • Related: stackoverflow.com/questions/60034/… Nov 26, 2015 at 16:11
  • If you just want to delete certain lines from a file, use FIND /? Apr 25, 2016 at 13:04

16 Answers 16

169

Today powershell saved me.

For grep there is:

get-content somefile.txt | where { $_ -match "expression"}

or

select-string somefile.txt -pattern "expression"

and for sed there is:

get-content somefile.txt | %{$_ -replace "expression","replace"}

For more detail about replace PowerShell function see this Microsoft article.

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  • 19
    In addition: if you want to call it from normal cmd, just @powershell -Command "get-content..." it. The only caveat is that you must escape quotations marks: ... -Command "get-content ... \"expression\",..."
    – Tarc
    Jul 25, 2014 at 19:13
  • 3
    I tried this today on a file to remove some stuff between quotes in certain places, only to discover that the output was a file almost twice as large as the original. The reason appeared to be that this method changed the way newlines were handled in the file to use "\r\n" instead of "\n".
    – user132278
    Sep 26, 2016 at 1:16
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    Doubling due to \r\n would imply that your file was composed purely of newlines. Here is the real reason: encoding.
    – Amit Naidu
    Oct 8, 2016 at 1:20
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    @and-bri (Get-Content c:\temp\test.txt).replace('[MYID]', 'MyValue') | Set-Content c:\temp\test.txt
    – AFP_555
    May 3, 2019 at 15:44
  • 3
    @JakubŠturc The solution you put for replacing sed didn't work for me. I used this instead and it worked fine: (Get-Content myFile.txt) -replace 'foo', 'bar' | Out-File -encoding ASCII myFile.txt (this is for replacing the text 'foo' with the text 'bar' in the entire file. This was taken from stackoverflow.com/a/20999154/4441211 Dec 8, 2021 at 9:13
112

sed (and its ilk) are contained within several packages of Unix commands.

If you don't want to install anything and your system ain't a Windows Server one, then you could use a scripting language (VBScript e.g.) for that. Below is a gross, off-the-cuff stab at it. Your command line would look like

cscript //NoLogo sed.vbs s/(oldpat)/(newpat)/ < inpfile.txt > outfile.txt

where oldpat and newpat are Microsoft vbscript regex patterns. Obviously I've only implemented the substitute command and assumed some things, but you could flesh it out to be smarter and understand more of the sed command-line.

Dim pat, patparts, rxp, inp
pat = WScript.Arguments(0)
patparts = Split(pat,"/")
Set rxp = new RegExp
rxp.Global = True
rxp.Multiline = False
rxp.Pattern = patparts(1)
Do While Not WScript.StdIn.AtEndOfStream
  inp = WScript.StdIn.ReadLine()
  WScript.Echo rxp.Replace(inp, patparts(2))
Loop
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  • 1
    This is not exactly what I want however I beleave that the dependency upon VBS is the most lightest solution. Sep 24, 2008 at 16:08
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    GnuWin32 is a native solution, if by native you mean designed to run in the "normal" windows environment (unlike CygWin). Give them a try, and you'll start expecting them to be on EVERY windows system you use. !!! May 26, 2009 at 13:09
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    Works for my case! Also, don't forget "//NoLogo" cscript option. Jun 21, 2010 at 14:38
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    If this is "off-the-cuff", wonder what your other code looks like! Amazing, thanks.
    – Sabuncu
    Jul 14, 2011 at 7:10
  • 2
    A similar regex search and replace utility can be done with JScript. The advantage of JScript over VBScript is it can be easily combined with batch in a single script, making the utility easier to use in a batch or command line context. A robust hybrid JScript/batch utility called REPL.BAT is available. It has many command line options. Full documentation is embedded within the script. It certainly doesn't have full sed capability, but even so, it is quite powerfull.
    – dbenham
    Sep 26, 2013 at 15:54
23

UnxUtils provides sed for Win32, as does GNUWin32.

18

If you don't want to install anything (I assume you want to add the script into some solution/program/etc that will be run in other machines), you could try creating a vbs script (lets say, replace.vbs):

Const ForReading = 1
Const ForWriting = 2

strFileName = Wscript.Arguments(0)
strOldText = Wscript.Arguments(1)
strNewText = Wscript.Arguments(2)

Set objFSO = CreateObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject")
Set objFile = objFSO.OpenTextFile(strFileName, ForReading)

strText = objFile.ReadAll
objFile.Close
strNewText = Replace(strText, strOldText, strNewText)

Set objFile = objFSO.OpenTextFile(strFileName, ForWriting)
objFile.Write strNewText
objFile.Close

And you run it like this:

cscript replace.vbs "C:\One.txt" "Robert" "Rob"

Which is similar to the sed version provided by "bill weaver", but I think this one is more friendly in terms of special (' > < / ) characters.

Btw, I didn't write this, but I can't recall where I got it from.

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> (Get-content file.txt) | Foreach-Object {$_ -replace "^SourceRegexp$", "DestinationString"} | Set-Content file.txt

This is behaviour of

sed -i 's/^SourceRegexp$/DestinationString/g' file.txt
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    It works perfectly. Note: the parenthesis on "get-content" ensure that the file will not be in use later when "set-content" will be called.
    – Kafumanto
    May 24, 2017 at 17:48
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    is something similar possible in cmd? in understand this is for pwsh only
    – Ferroao
    Jan 9, 2020 at 11:27
  • is 'SourceRegexp' ment to be substituded by any possible regex? does that really works in power shell?
    – scjorge
    Feb 27, 2020 at 16:40
10

There is Super Sed an enhanced version of sed. For Windows this is a standalone .exe, intended for running from the command line.

8

You could try powershell. There are get-content and set-content commandlets build in that you could use.

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    Those are probably the two things in PowerShell that contribute least to what sed does ;-). The -replace operator is probably a better suggestion.
    – Joey
    Apr 21, 2010 at 8:51
8

Try fart.exe. It's a Find-and-replace-text utility that can be used in command batch programs.

http://sourceforge.net/projects/fart-it/

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  • If I really can't use a *nix like shell, I prefer this since it's a small standalone exe with no dependencies.
    – Qben
    Oct 1, 2012 at 12:32
  • fart :'DDDD and fart-it :'DDD ... I like programming :'DDDD Sep 9, 2022 at 16:42
7

I use Cygwin. I run into a lot of people that do not realize that if you put the Cygwin binaries on your PATH, you can use them from within the Windows Command shell. You do not have to run Cygwin's Bash.

You might also look into Windows Services for Unix available from Microsoft (but only on the Professional and above versions of Windows).

5

You could install Cygwin (http://www.cygwin.com/) and use sed from there.

0
5

edlin or edit

plus there is Windows Services for Unix which comes with many unix tools for windows. http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/interopmigration/bb380242.aspx

Update 12/7/12 In Windows 2003 R2, Windows 7 & Server 2008, etc. the above is replaced by the Subsystem for UNIX-Based Applications (SUA) as an add-on. But you have to download the utilities: http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=2391

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    Both don't exist anymore on 64-bit versions of Windows.
    – Joey
    Apr 21, 2010 at 8:51
5

There is a helper batch file for Windows called repl.bat which has much of the ability of SED but doesn't require any additional download or installation. It is a hybrid batch file that uses Jscript to implement the features and so is swift, and doesn't suffer from the usual poison characters of batch processing and handles blank lines with ease.

Download repl from - https://www.dropbox.com/s/qidqwztmetbvklt/repl.bat

Alternative link - https://www.dostips.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=6044

The author is @dbenham from stack overflow and dostips.com

Another helper batch file called findrepl.bat gives the Windows user much of the capabilty of GREP and is also based on Jscript and is likewise a hybrid batch file. It shares the benefits of repl.bat

Download findrepl from - https://www.dropbox.com/s/rfdldmcb6vwi9xc/findrepl.bat

The author is @aacini from stack overflow and dostips.com

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  • The dropbox link for repl is down. Do you have a secondary link? Apr 3, 2019 at 17:43
3

You could look at GNU Tools, they provide (amongst other things) sed on windows.

3

As far as I know nothing like sed is bundled with windows. However, sed is available for Windows in several different forms, including as part of Cygwin, if you want a full POSIX subsystem, or as a Win32 native executable if you want to run just sed on the command line.

Sed for Windows (GnuWin32 Project)

If it needs to be native to Windows then the only other thing I can suggest would be to use a scripting language supported by Windows without add-ons, such as VBScript.

1

Cygwin works, but these utilities are also available. Just plop them on your drive, put the directory into your path, and you have many of your friendly unix utilities. Lighterweight IMHO that Cygwin (although that works just as well).

1

I needed a sed tool that worked for the Windows cmd.exe prompt. Eric Pement's port of sed to a single DOS .exe worked great for me.

It's pretty well documented.

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    The question is about Windows (cmd.exe) not about DOS
    – user330315
    Jan 1, 2015 at 8:51
  • @royhowie: I see. Although some of these answers may be useful to somebody, I agree that the question itself isn't really suitable for SO. OTOH, I don't feel qualified to recommend wholesale deletion.
    – PM 2Ring
    Jan 1, 2015 at 9:30
  • In this situation I think it would be difficult to include the essential parts of the answer, since the essential part is an .exe file that is hosted on the linked page. I totally understand the worry about link-rot, I'm just unsure how I could make this self-contained to SO. Jan 1, 2015 at 14:52
  • Thanks for the catch, a_horse_with_no_name. I was being sloppy with my language. I edited my comment to fix the problem you pointed out. Jan 1, 2015 at 14:53

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