I'm messing with a bash script that will remove spaces from filenames
(usually for mp3s I get from newsgroups). I had this:

	echo $src | sed -e 's/[ ]+/_/g' -

("src" contains the filename with spaces in it) and thought that the "+"
would add a little bit of robustness, but the spaces didn't get replaced
when I used that regexp!

I tried "s/ /_/g" and "s/[ ]/_g" and those worked, and then found the
[[:space:]] character class, so my script works now.

Additionally, I think bash automatically strips out multiple whitespace:
I have a file called "lotsa   spaces", and when I do

	for f in * ; do echo $f ; done

it prints "lotsa spaces" for that file.

So I've fixed my problem -- but why doesn't sed understand "[ ]+" or
" +" ?

Thanks,

Dan

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| Dan Drake <drake+tclug at lemongecko.org> | http://lemongecko.org/drake/
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