I’ve only ever found a use for sed once two decades into my career, and that was to work around a bug due to misuse of BigInt for some hash calculations in a Java component; awk remains unused. Bash builtins cover almost everything for which I find those are typically used.
If you’re using find all the time, check to see if you have or can have some variant of locate installed. It indexes everything* on the system (* this is configurable) and can be queried with partial pathnames, even with regex, and it’s fast.
That’s wild to me, as I used sed all the time. Quickly and easy changes in configs? Bam sed. Don’t even need to open vi when I can grep for what I need, then swap it with sed. Though I imagine more seasoned vi nerds would be able to do this faster.
I’ve only ever found a use for sed once two decades into my career, and that was to work around a bug due to misuse of BigInt for some hash calculations in a Java component; awk remains unused. Bash builtins cover almost everything for which I find those are typically used.
find and grep see heavy daily use.
If you’re using
find
all the time, check to see if you have or can have some variant oflocate
installed. It indexes everything* on the system (* this is configurable) and can be queried with partial pathnames, even with regex, and it’s fast.I use locate when I don’t know where the files are. Find has finer controls and can differentiate between regular files, links, directories, etc.
That’s wild to me, as I used sed all the time. Quickly and easy changes in configs? Bam sed. Don’t even need to open vi when I can grep for what I need, then swap it with sed. Though I imagine more seasoned vi nerds would be able to do this faster.
sed
is not for daily use, it is for reusable scripts. For other purposes interactive editors are more convinient.