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Home/ Questions/Q 9157991
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 17, 20262026-06-17T13:08:52+00:00 2026-06-17T13:08:52+00:00

Im trying to understand sed command and loops. I need to take part of

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Im trying to understand sed command and loops.
I need to take part of the text (20 lines) and append it to the csv with the file name.
here is my code

for i in ~/mspl/*.doc
do 
    catdoc "$i" > auto.txt
    sed -e '1,20!d' auto.txt > auto1.txt
    sed -e '1s/^/"$i" ;/' auto1.txt > auto2.txt
    sed -e '20s/$/~/' auto2.txt > auto3.txt
    cat auto3.txt >> lines.csv
done

the problem is that my second “i” argument doesn’t convert to the file name in csv.

in the line

sed -e '1s/^/"$i" ;/' auto1.txt > auto2.txt

Please tell what is my mistake here?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-17T13:08:53+00:00Added an answer on June 17, 2026 at 1:08 pm

    The issue is that variables are not expanded within single quotes '. Use double quotes instead ":

    # this is assuming you did want to add explicit " around your $i
    sed -e "1s/^/\"$i\" ;/" auto1.txt > auto2.txt
    

    If your double-quoted string needs to contain explicit double quotes, you have to escape them (\"). If using double quotes is not an option (e.g. if you have a very complex command with multiple levels of quoting already) you can always exit the quoting around your variable:

    sed -e '1s/^/"'$i'" ;/' auto1.txt > auto2.txt
    
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