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Date:      Tue, 7 Nov 2017 21:20:40 +0300
From:      Yuri Pankov <yuripv@gmx.com>
To:        byrnejb@harte-lyne.ca
Cc:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: sed - remove nul lines from file
Message-ID:  <c00693b7-ae1b-4aa8-49e2-81296cfb281f@gmx.com>
In-Reply-To: <88b1870184a8810072fe503917cd86be.squirrel@webmail.harte-lyne.ca>
References:  <b21bf201363c34a90ab55c4a05ff8fd7.squirrel@webmail.harte-lyne.ca> <88a59a82-2902-9f63-0a94-bd23b910e7ad@gmx.com> <c2b1ffce6933bcb8f47c856a40d29b16.squirrel@webmail.harte-lyne.ca> <f51d6c8a-c91c-dc7c-6134-e276ec60b179@gmx.com> <88b1870184a8810072fe503917cd86be.squirrel@webmail.harte-lyne.ca>

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On Tue, 7 Nov 2017 13:14:08 -0500, James B  Byrne Via Freebsd-questions 
wrote:
> 
> On Tue, November 7, 2017 13:03, Yuri Pankov wrote:
> 
>>
>> You want /d, not /g, to delete the *lines* which contain NUL symbols
>> (that's what your subject line said).
>>
> 
> Sigh.  Thank you.  That works.  However, it also deletes any line that
> has even one NUL in it regardless of the presence of other non-nul
> characters on the line.
> 
> What I wish to accomplish is to delete only the lines that are
> completely nul.  I thought that this could be accomplished by
> prefacing the match sting with the start of line anchor ^ and ending
> it with the end of line anchor $ but this does not work as I expect.

"[[.NUL.]]" is just a character specified by its collation name, so 
treat as any other ordinary character:

sed -E '/^[[.NUL.]]+$/d' INFILE > OUTFILE

Need extended regexp here for '+' to work.



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