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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 13, 20262026-06-13T04:20:21+00:00 2026-06-13T04:20:21+00:00

I am trying to write a bash script to use sed to delete some

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I am trying to write a bash script to use sed to delete some lines of a file. The line numbers are stored in another file in reverse order.
The command I am trying to do is the following:

sed -e '{lineNumber}d' ./file.txt

This is what I have so far but it’s not working

while read -r line 
do 
   sed -e "/${line}d" ./file.txt
done < ./lineNum.txt

I am getting the following error:
sed: -e expression #1, char 4: unterminated address regex

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-13T04:20:23+00:00Added an answer on June 13, 2026 at 4:20 am
    while read -r line; do sed -i "${line} d" ./file.txt; done < ./linenum.txt
    

    This works (I think your problem was to use -e); but it’s not efficient. It may be better to pass multiple lines at a time to sed, to avoid reading and writing the file once per line. E.g., you could transform linenum.txt into something like “6 d;2 d;1 d;” and then pass it to sed for one scoop processing.

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