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6 months ago | |
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| .cfg.example | 1 year ago | |
| .gitignore | 8 months ago | |
| LICENSE | 7 years ago | |
| README.md | 8 months ago | |
| account.ini.sample | 8 months ago | |
| sedbot.bash | 6 months ago | |
| sedbot.service | 8 months ago | |
forked from clsr/sedbot -
updated for -i's new argument requirement and daemonized
sedbot is an IRC search-replace bot written using bash and sed.
cp .cfg{.example,}bash sedbot.bashmkdir -p ~/.config/systemd/usercp sedbot.service ~/.config/systemd/user/systemctl --user daemon-reloadsystemctl --user enable --now sedbotcp account.ini{.sample,}systemctl --user restart sedbot)Only the s command and g and i flags are supported. Multiple regular expressions can be used at once, delimit them with spaces in between the flags and the s next one’s s command. The last one may omit the trailing / if it has no options.
Example usage in chat:
<foo> Hello ther!
<foo> s/ther/there
<sedbot> <foo> Hello there!
<foo> I'm programmign right now
<bar> foo: s/gn/ng/
<sedbot> <foo> I'm programming right now
<foo> abcdefghi
<foo> s/\(.\)./\u\1/g s/
<sedbot> <foo> ACEGi
<foo> s/[a-e]//g s/\(.\)\(.\)/\2\1
<sedbot> <foo> gfhi
Note that the bot uses the standard grep (POSIX) regular expressions, i.e. use .\+ and \(foo\)\? instead of .+ and (foo)? as you’d do in egrep or other regex engines. Backreferences are written like s/\(.\)/\1, where \1 matches the first capturing group. Read more about sed regular expressions.