Sed Command to Delete Lines: Sed command can be used to delete or remove specific lines which match a given pattern or are in a particular position in a file. Here we will see how to delete lines using the sed command with various examples.
The following file contains sample data which is used as an input file in all the examples:
cat file
Output:
linux
unix
fedora
debian
ubuntu
Sed Command to Delete Lines – Based on Position in File
In the following examples, the sed command removes the lines in the file that are in a particular position in a file.
1. Delete first-line or header line
The d option in the sed command is used to delete a line. The syntax for deleting a line is:
sed 'Nd' file
Here N indicates Nth line in a file. In the following example, the sed command removes the first line in a file.
sed '1d' file
Output:
unix
fedora
debian
ubuntu
2. Delete last line or footer line or trailer line
The following sed command is used to remove the footer line in a file. The $ indicates the last line of a file.
sed '$d' file
Output:
linux
unix
fedora
debian
3. Delete a particular line
This is similar to the first example. The below sed command removes the second line in a file.
sed '2d' file
Output:
linux
fedora
debian
ubuntu
4. Delete a range of lines
The sed command can be used to delete a range of lines. The syntax is shown below:
sed 'm,nd' file
Here m and n are min and max line numbers. The sed command removes the lines from m to n in the file. The following sed command deletes the lines ranging from 2 to 4:
sed '2,4d' file
Output:
linux
ubuntu
5. Delete lines other than the first line or header line
Use the negation (!) operator with the d option in the sed command. The following sed command removes all the lines except the header line.
sed '1!d' file
Output:
linux
6. Delete lines other than the last line or footer line
sed '$!d' file
Output:
ubuntu
7. Delete lines other than the specified range
sed '2,4!d' file
Output:
unix
fedora
debian
Here the sed command removes lines other than 2nd, 3rd, and 4th.
8. Delete the first and the last line
You can specify the list of lines you want to remove in the sed command with a semicolon as a delimiter.
sed '1d;$d' file
Output:
unix
fedora
debian
9. Delete empty lines or blank lines
sed '/^$/d' file
The ^$ indicates sed command to delete empty lines. However, this sed does not remove the lines that contain spaces.
Sed Command to Delete Lines – Based on Pattern Match
In the following examples, the sed command deletes the lines in the file which match the given pattern.
10. Delete lines that begin with the specified character
sed '/^u/d' file
Output:
linux
fedora
debian
^ is to specify the starting of the line. Above sed command removes all the lines that start with the character u.
11. Delete lines that end with the specified character
sed '/x$/d' file
Output:
fedora
debian
ubuntu
$ is to indicate the end of the line. The above command deletes all the lines that end with the character x.
12. Delete lines that are in upper case or capital letters
sed '/^[A-Z]*$/d' file
13. Delete lines that contain a pattern
sed '/debian/d' file
Output:
linux
unix
fedora
ubuntu
14. Delete lines starting from a pattern till the last line
sed '/fedora/,$d' file
Output:
linux
unix
Here the sed command removes the line that matches the pattern fedora and also deletes all the lines to the end of the file which appear next to this matching line.
15. Delete the last line only if it contains the pattern
sed '${/ubuntu/d;}' file
Output:
linux
unix
fedora
debian
Here $ indicates the last line. If you want to delete the Nth line only if it contains a pattern, then in place of $ place the line number.
Note: In all the above examples, the sed command prints the contents of the file on the UNIX or Linux terminal by removing the lines. However, the sed command does not remove the lines from the source file. To remove the lines from the source file itself, use the -i option with the sed command.
sed -i '1d' file
If you don’t wish to delete the lines from the original source file you can redirect the output of the sed command to another file.
sed '1d' file > newfile