====== SED - Special Characters - sed behaving strangely in UTF-8 environment ====== ===== Your problem ===== You are using a Linux distribution with UTF-8 encoding. You are using sed to operate on files containing German Umlauts or other non-Ascii characters. sed is behaving quite strangly. An expression like the following normally should replace an arbitrary string by a single x. The dot, however, does not match non-Ascii characters any more! sed 's/.*/x/' ---- ===== The reason ===== The problem occurs if you operate on ISO-8859 (Latin) encoded files. A non-ascii character is misinterpreted in UTF-8 as a sequence of characters or - even worse - as an invalid UTF-8 string. So sed classifies the character as something not being matched by a dot. Strange and dangerous... ---- ===== Solution ===== Converting your system back from UTF-8 to ISO-8859 seems not to be a good solution. A problem similar to the upper one would occur then when you operate with UTF-8 files. Better use **iconv** to convert the data on the fly: iconv -f latin1 -t utf-8 sourcefile | sed 's/.*/x/' | iconv -f utf-8 -t latin1 iconv -f ISO-8859-15 -t utf-8 espanol.txt | sed -n '/[[:graph:][:space:]]\{5\}/!p' | iconv -f utf-8 -t ISO-8859-15