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Home/ Questions/Q 814591
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T01:32:46+00:00 2026-05-15T01:32:46+00:00

I have a grep expression using cygwin grep on Win. grep -a \\,,/\|\\m/\|\\m/\\>\.</\\m/\|:u all_fbs.txt

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I have a grep expression using cygwin grep on Win.

grep -a "\\,,/\|\\m/\|\\m/\\>\.</\\m/\|:u" all_fbs.txt > rockon_fbs.txt

Once I identify the emoticon class, however, I want to strip them out of the data. However, the same regexp above within a sed results in a syntax error (yes, I realize I could use /d instead of //g, but this doesn’t make a difference, I still get the error.)

sed "s/\(\\,,/\|\\m/\|\\m/\\>\.</\\m/\|:u\)*//g"

The full line is:

grep -a "\\,,/\|\\m/\|\\m/\\>\.</\\m/\|:u" all_fbs.txt | sed "s/\(\\,,/\|\\m/\|\\m/\\>\.</\\m/\|:u\)*//g" | sed "s/^/ROCKON\t/" > rockon_fbs.txt

The result is:

sed: -e expression #1, char 14: unknown option to `s'

I know it’s coming from the sed regexp I’m asking about it b/c if I remove that portion of the full line, then I get no error (but, of course, the emoticons are not filtered out).

Thanks in advance,

Steve

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T01:32:47+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 1:32 am

    You need to escape / otherwise it will prematurely terminate the expression.

    s/\(\\,,/\|\\m/\|\\m/\\>\.</\\m/\|:u\)*//g
            ^     ^     ^      ^   ^
              These need escaping.
    

    You should also use single-quoted strings instead of double-quoted strings to prevent the backslashes being interpreted by the shell:

    $ echo "\\,"
    \,
    $ echo '\\,'
    \\,
    

    So try this:

    $ echo 'foo \m/ bar \,,/ baz' | sed 's/\(\\,,\/\|\\m\/\|\\m\/\\>\.<\/\\m\/\|:u\)*//g'
    foo  bar  baz
    
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