# sd - `s`earch & `d`isplace `sd` is an intuitive find & replace CLI. ## The Pitch Why use it over any existing tools? *Painless regular expressions.*   `sd` uses regex syntax that you already know from JavaScript and Python. Forget about dealing with quirks of `sed` or `awk` - get productive immediately. *String-literal mode.*   Non-regex find & replace. No more backslashes or remembering which characters are special and need to be escaped. *Easy to read, easy to write.*   Find & replace expressions are split up, which makes them easy to read and write. No more messing with unclosed and escaped slashes. *Smart, common-sense defaults.*   Defaults follow common sense and are tailored for typical daily use. ## Comparison to sed While sed does a whole lot more, sd focuses on doing just one thing and doing it well. Here are some cherry-picked examples where sd shines. Simpler syntax for replacing all occurrences: - sd: `sd before after` - sed: `sed s/before/after/g` Replace newlines with commas: - sd: `sd '\n' ','` - sed: `sed ':a;N;$!ba;s/\n/,/g'` Extracting stuff out of strings containing slashes: - sd: `echo "sample with /path/" | sd '.*(/.*/)' '$1'` - sed: `echo "sample with /path/" | sed -E 's/.*(\\/.*\\/)/\1/g'` With sed, you can make it better with a different delimiter, but it is still messy: `echo "sample with /path/" | sed -E 's|.*(/.*/)|\1|g'` In place modification of files: - sd: `sd before after file.txt` - sed: `sed -i -e 's/before/after/g' file.txt` With sed, you need to remember to use `-e` or else some platforms will consider the next argument to be a backup suffix. ## Benchmarks **Simple replacement on ~1.5 gigabytes of JSON** ```sh hyperfine --warmup 3 --export-markdown out.md \ 'sed -E "s/\"/'"'"'/g" *.json > /dev/null' \ 'sed "s/\"/'"'"'/g" *.json > /dev/null' \ 'sd "\"" "'"'"'" *.json > /dev/null' ``` | Command | Mean [s] | Min…Max [s] | |:---|---:|---:| | `sed -E "s/\"/'/g" *.json > /dev/null` | 2.338 ± 0.008 | 2.332…2.358 | | `sed "s/\"/'/g" *.json > /dev/null` | 2.365 ± 0.009 | 2.351…2.378 | | `sd "\"" "'" *.json > /dev/null` | **0.997 ± 0.006** | 0.987…1.007 | Result: ~2.35 times faster **Regex replacement on a ~55M json file**: ```sh hyperfine --warmup 3 --export-markdown out.md \ 'sed -E "s:(\w+):\1\1:g" dump.json > /dev/null' \ 'sed "s:\(\w\+\):\1\1:g" dump.json > /dev/null' \ 'sd "(\w+)" "$1$1" dump.json > /dev/null' ``` | Command | Mean [s] | Min…Max [s] | |:---|---:|---:| | `sed -E "s:(\w+):\1\1:g" dump.json > /dev/null` | 11.315 ± 0.215 | 11.102…11.725 | | `sed "s:\(\w\+\):\1\1:g" dump.json > /dev/null` | 11.239 ± 0.208 | 11.057…11.762 | | `sd "(\w+)" "$1$1" dump.json > /dev/null` | **0.942 ± 0.004** | 0.936…0.951 | Result: ~11.93 times faster ## Installation Install through [`cargo`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/getting-started/installation.html) with `cargo install sd`, or through various package managers [![Packaging status](https://repology.org/badge/vertical-allrepos/sd-find-replace.svg?exclude_unsupported=1)](https://repology.org/project/sd-find-replace/versions) ## Quick Guide 1. **String-literal mode**. By default, expressions are treated as regex. Use `-F` or `--fixed-strings` to disable regex. ```sh > echo 'lots((([]))) of special chars' | sd -F '((([])))' '' lots of special chars ``` 2. **Basic regex use** - let's trim some trailing whitespace ```sh > echo 'lorem ipsum 23 ' | sd '\s+$' '' lorem ipsum 23 ``` 3. **Capture groups** Indexed capture groups: ```sh > echo 'cargo +nightly watch' | sd '(\w+)\s+\+(\w+)\s+(\w+)' 'cmd: $1, channel: $2, subcmd: $3' cmd: cargo, channel: nightly, subcmd: watch ``` Named capture groups: ```sh > echo "123.45" | sd '(?P\d+)\.(?P\d+)' '$dollars dollars and $cents cents' 123 dollars and 45 cents ``` In the unlikely case you stumble upon ambiguities, resolve them by using `${var}` instead of `$var`. Here's an example: ```sh > echo '123.45' | sd '(?P\d+)\.(?P\d+)' '$dollars_dollars and $cents_cents' and > echo '123.45' | sd '(?P\d+)\.(?P\d+)' '${dollars}_dollars and ${cents}_cents' 123_dollars and 45_cents ``` 4. **Find & replace in a file** ```sh > sd 'window.fetch' 'fetch' http.js ``` That's it. The file is modified in-place. To preview changes: ```sh > sd -p 'window.fetch' 'fetch' http.js ``` 5. **Find & replace across project** This example uses [fd](https://github.com/sharkdp/fd). Good ol' unix philosophy to the rescue. ```sh fd --type file --exec sd 'from "react"' 'from "preact"' ``` Same, but with backups (consider version control). ```bash fd --type file --exec cp {} {}.bk \; --exec sd 'from "react"' 'from "preact"' ``` ### Edge cases sd will interpret every argument starting with `-` as a (potentially unknown) flag. The common convention of using `--` to signal the end of flags is respected: ```bash $ echo "./hello foo" | sd "foo" "-w" error: Found argument '-w' which wasn't expected, or isn't valid in this context USAGE: sd [OPTIONS] [files]... For more information try --help $ echo "./hello foo" | sd "foo" -- "-w" ./hello -w $ echo "./hello --foo" | sd -- "--foo" "-w" ./hello -w ``` ### Escaping special characters To escape the `$` character, use `$$`: ```bash ❯ echo "foo" | sd 'foo' '$$bar' $bar ```