I tried the following code to replace QQ with ZZ, but it doesn't do what I want:
var1=QQ
sed -i 's/$var1/ZZ/g' $file
However, this code does what I want:
sed -i 's/QQ/ZZ/g' $file
How do I use variables in sed?
I tried the following code to replace QQ with ZZ, but it doesn't do what I want:
var1=QQ
sed -i 's/$var1/ZZ/g' $file
However, this code does what I want:
sed -i 's/QQ/ZZ/g' $file
How do I use variables in sed?
The shell is responsible for expanding variables. When you use single quotes for strings, its contents will be treated literally, so sed now tries to replace every occurrence of the literal $var1 by ZZ.
Use double quotes to make the shell expand variables while preserving whitespace:
sed -i "s/$var1/ZZ/g" "$file"
When you require the quote character in the replacement string, you have to precede it with a backslash which will be interpreted by the shell. In the following example, the string quote me will be replaced by "quote me" (the character & is interpreted by sed):
sed -i "s/quote me/\"&\"/" "$file"
If you've a lot shell meta-characters, consider using single quotes for the pattern, and double quotes for the variable:
sed -i 's,'"$pattern"',Say hurrah to &: \0/,' "$file"
Notice how I use s,pattern,replacement, instead of s/pattern/replacement/, I did it to avoid interference with the / in \0/.
The shell then runs the above command sed with the next arguments (assuming pattern=bert and file=text.txt):
-i
s,bert,Say hurrah to &: \0/,
text.txt
If file.txt contains bert, the output will be:
Say hurrah to bert: \0/
To expand (pun intended) on @mani's answer,
perl| may appear in your variable's value as well, so don't be scared to try other delimiters