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TR(1P)                                              POSIX Programmer's Manual                                             TR(1P)



PROLOG
       This  manual  page is part of the POSIX Programmer's Manual.  The Linux implementation of this interface may differ (con-
       sult the corresponding Linux manual page for details of Linux behavior), or the  interface  may  not  be  implemented  on
       Linux.

NAME
       tr - translate characters

SYNOPSIS
       tr [-c | -C][-s] string1 string2

       tr -s [-c | -C] string1

       tr -d [-c | -C] string1

       tr -ds [-c | -C] string1 string2


DESCRIPTION
       The tr utility shall copy the standard input to the standard output with substitution or deletion of selected characters.
       The options specified and the string1 and string2 operands shall control translations that occur while copying characters
       and single-character collating elements.

OPTIONS
       The  tr utility shall conform to the Base Definitions volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, Section 12.2, Utility Syntax Guide-
       lines.

       The following options shall be supported:

       -c     Complement the set of values specified by string1. See the EXTENDED DESCRIPTION section.

       -C     Complement the set of characters specified by string1. See the EXTENDED DESCRIPTION section.

       -d     Delete all occurrences of input characters that are specified by string1.

       -s     Replace instances of repeated characters with a single character, as described in the  EXTENDED  DESCRIPTION  sec-
              tion.


OPERANDS
       The following operands shall be supported:

       string1, string2

              Translation  control  strings.  Each  string  shall represent a set of characters to be converted into an array of
              characters used for the translation. For a detailed description of  how  the  strings  are  interpreted,  see  the
              EXTENDED DESCRIPTION section.


STDIN
       The standard input can be any type of file.

INPUT FILES
       None.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
       The following environment variables shall affect the execution of tr:

       LANG   Provide  a  default value for the internationalization variables that are unset or null. (See the Base Definitions
              volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, Section 8.2, Internationalization Variables for the precedence  of  international-
              ization variables used to determine the values of locale categories.)

       LC_ALL If set to a non-empty string value, override the values of all the other internationalization variables.

       LC_COLLATE

              Determine the locale for the behavior of range expressions and equivalence classes.

       LC_CTYPE
              Determine the locale for the interpretation of sequences of bytes of text data as characters (for example, single-
              byte as opposed to multi-byte characters in arguments) and the behavior of character classes.

       LC_MESSAGES
              Determine the locale that should be used to affect the format and contents of diagnostic messages written to stan-
              dard error.

       NLSPATH
              Determine the location of message catalogs for the processing of LC_MESSAGES .


ASYNCHRONOUS EVENTS
       Default.

STDOUT
       The tr output shall be identical to the input, with the exception of the specified transformations.

STDERR
       The standard error shall be used only for diagnostic messages.

OUTPUT FILES
       None.

EXTENDED DESCRIPTION
       The operands string1 and string2 (if specified) define two arrays of characters. The constructs in the following list can
       be used to specify characters or single-character collating elements. If any of the constructs result in  multi-character
       collating elements, tr shall exclude, without a diagnostic, those multi-character elements from the resulting array.

       character
              Any character not described by one of the conventions below shall represent itself.

       \octal Octal sequences can be used to represent characters with specific coded values. An octal sequence shall consist of
              a backslash followed by the longest sequence of one, two, or three-octal-digit characters (01234567). The sequence
              shall  cause  the  value  whose encoding is represented by the one, two, or three-digit octal integer to be placed
              into the array. If the size of a byte on the system is greater than nine bits, the valid escape sequence  used  to
              represent  a byte is implementation-defined. Multi-byte characters require multiple, concatenated escape sequences
              of this type, including the leading '\' for each byte.

       \character
              The backslash-escape sequences in the Base Definitions volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, Table 5-1, Escape Sequences
              and Associated Actions ( '\\', '\a', '\b', '\f', '\n', '\r', '\t', '\v' ) shall be supported. The results of using
              any other character, other than an octal digit, following the backslash are unspecified.

       c-c    In the POSIX locale, this construct shall represent the range of collating elements between  the  range  endpoints
              (as  long  as  neither  endpoint  is an octal sequence of the form \octal), inclusive, as defined by the collation
              sequence. The characters or collating elements in the range shall be placed in the array  in  ascending  collation
              sequence.  If  the  second  endpoint  precedes  the starting endpoint in the collation sequence, it is unspecified
              whether the range of collating elements is empty, or this construct is treated as invalid. In locales  other  than
              the POSIX locale, this construct has unspecified behavior.

       If  either  or both of the range endpoints are octal sequences of the form \octal, this shall represent the range of spe-
       cific coded values between the two range endpoints, inclusive.

       :class:
              Represents all characters belonging to the defined character class, as defined  by  the  current  setting  of  the
              LC_CTYPE locale category. The following character class names shall be accepted when specified in string1:

                                                alnum   blank   digit   lower   punct   upper

                                                alpha   cntrl   graph   print   space   xdigit

       In  addition,  character class expressions of the form [: name:] shall be recognized in those locales where the name key-
       word has been given a charclass definition in the LC_CTYPE category.

       When both the -d and -s options are specified, any of the character class names shall be accepted in string2.  Otherwise,
       only character class names lower or upper are valid in string2 and then only if the corresponding character class ( upper
       and lower, respectively) is specified in the same relative position in string1. Such a specification shall be interpreted
       as  a request for case conversion. When [: lower:] appears in string1 and [: upper:] appears in string2, the arrays shall
       contain the characters from the toupper mapping in the LC_CTYPE category of the current locale. When [:  upper:]  appears
       in  string1  and  [:  lower:] appears in string2, the arrays shall contain the characters from the tolower mapping in the
       LC_CTYPE category of the current locale. The first character from each mapping pair shall be in the array for string1 and
       the second character from each mapping pair shall be in the array for string2 in the same relative position.

       Except  for  case conversion, the characters specified by a character class expression shall be placed in the array in an
       unspecified order.

       If the name specified for class does not define a valid character class in the current locale, the behavior is undefined.

       =equiv=
              Represents all characters or collating elements belonging to the same equivalence class as equiv,  as  defined  by
              the  current  setting  of the LC_COLLATE locale category. An equivalence class expression shall be allowed only in
              string1, or in string2 when it is being used by the combined -d and -s options. The characters  belonging  to  the
              equivalence class shall be placed in the array in an unspecified order.

       x*n    Represents  n repeated occurrences of the character x.  Because this expression is used to map multiple characters
              to one, it is only valid when it occurs in string2. If n is omitted or is zero, it shall be interpreted  as  large
              enough  to extend the string2-based sequence to the length of the string1-based sequence. If n has a leading zero,
              it shall be interpreted as an octal value. Otherwise, it shall be interpreted as a decimal value.


       When the -d option is not specified:

        * Each input character found in the array specified by string1 shall be replaced by the character in the  same  relative
          position  in  the array specified by string2. When the array specified by string2 is shorter that the one specified by
          string1, the results are unspecified.

        * If the -C option is specified, the complements of the characters specified by string1 (the set of  all  characters  in
          the  current character set, as defined by the current setting of LC_CTYPE,  except for those actually specified in the
          string1 operand) shall be placed in the array in ascending collation sequence, as defined by the  current  setting  of
          LC_COLLATE.

        * If  the  -c  option  is  specified,  the complement of the values specified by string1 shall be placed in the array in
          ascending order by binary value.

        * Because the order in which characters specified by character class expressions or  equivalence  class  expressions  is
          undefined,  such  expressions should only be used if the intent is to map several characters into one. An exception is
          case conversion, as described previously.

       When the -d option is specified:

        * Input characters found in the array specified by string1 shall be deleted.

        * When the -C option is specified with -d, all characters except those specified by string1 shall be deleted.  The  con-
          tents of string2 are ignored, unless the -s option is also specified.

        * When  the  -c option is specified with -d, all values except those specified by string1 shall be deleted. The contents
          of string2 shall be ignored, unless the -s option is also specified.

        * The same string cannot be used for both the -d and the -s option; when both options are specified, both string1  (used
          for deletion) and string2 (used for squeezing) shall be required.

       When  the  -s  option  is specified, after any deletions or translations have taken place, repeated sequences of the same
       character shall be replaced by one occurrence of the same character, if the character is found in the array specified  by
       the last operand. If the last operand contains a character class, such as the following example:


              tr -s '[:space:]'

       the  last  operand's array shall contain all of the characters in that character class. However, in a case conversion, as
       described previously, such as:


              tr -s '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]'

       the last operand's array shall contain only those characters defined as the second characters in each of the  toupper  or
       tolower character pairs, as appropriate.

       An empty string used for string1 or string2 produces undefined results.

EXIT STATUS
       The following exit values shall be returned:

        0     All input was processed successfully.

       >0     An error occurred.


CONSEQUENCES OF ERRORS
       Default.

       The following sections are informative.

APPLICATION USAGE
       If necessary, string1 and string2 can be quoted to avoid pattern matching by the shell.

       If  an  ordinary  digit  (representing itself) is to follow an octal sequence, the octal sequence must use the full three
       digits to avoid ambiguity.

       When string2 is shorter than string1, a difference results between historical System V and BSD systems. A BSD system pads
       string2 with the last character found in string2.  Thus, it is possible to do the following:


              tr 0123456789 d

       which  would  translate  all  digits  to  the  letter 'd' . Since this area is specifically unspecified in this volume of
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, both the BSD and System V behaviors are allowed, but a conforming application cannot  rely  on  the
       BSD behavior. It would have to code the example in the following way:


              tr 0123456789 '[d*]'

       It should be noted that, despite similarities in appearance, the string operands used by tr are not regular expressions.

       Unlike some historical implementations, this definition of the tr utility correctly processes NUL characters in its input
       stream. NUL characters can be stripped by using:


              tr -d '\000'

EXAMPLES
        1. The following example creates a list of all words in file1 one per line in file2, where a word is taken to be a maxi-
           mal string of letters.


           tr -cs "[:alpha:]" "[\n*]" <file1 >file2

        2. The next example translates all lowercase characters in file1 to uppercase and writes the results to standard output.


           tr "[:lower:]" "[:upper:]" <file1

        3. This  example  uses  an equivalence class to identify accented variants of the base character 'e' in file1, which are
           stripped of diacritical marks and written to file2.


           tr "[=e=]" e <file1 >file2

RATIONALE
       In some early proposals, an explicit option -n was added to disable the historical behavior of stripping  NUL  characters
       from  the input. It was considered that automatically stripping NUL characters from the input was not correct functional-
       ity.  However, the removal of -n in a later proposal does not remove the requirement that tr correctly process NUL  char-
       acters in its input stream. NUL characters can be stripped by using tr -d '\000'.

       Historical  implementations  of  tr differ widely in syntax and behavior. For example, the BSD version has not needed the
       bracket characters for the repetition sequence. The tr utility syntax is based more closely on  the  System  V  and  XPG3
       model while attempting to accommodate historical BSD implementations. In the case of the short string2 padding, the deci-
       sion was to unspecify the behavior and preserve System V and XPG3 scripts, which  might  find  difficulty  with  the  BSD
       method.  The  assumption was made that BSD users of tr have to make accommodations to meet the syntax defined here. Since
       it is possible to use the repetition sequence to duplicate the desired behavior,  whereas  there  is  no  simple  way  to
       achieve the System V method, this was the correct, if not desirable, approach.

       The use of octal values to specify control characters, while having historical precedents, is not portable. The introduc-
       tion of escape sequences for control characters should provide the necessary portability. It is recognized that this  may
       cause some historical scripts to break.

       An early proposal included support for multi-character collating elements.  It was pointed out that, while tr does employ
       some syntactical elements from REs, the aim of tr is quite different; ranges, for example, do not have a similar  meaning
       (``any  of the chars in the range matches", versus "translate each character in the range to the output counterpart"). As
       a result, the previously included support for multi-character collating elements  has  been  removed.  What  remains  are
       ranges  in  current  collation  order  (to support, for example, accented characters), character classes, and equivalence
       classes.

       In XPG3 the [: class:] and [= equiv=] conventions are shown with double brackets, as in RE syntax. However, tr  does  not
       implement  RE  principles; it just borrows part of the syntax. Consequently, [: class:] and [= equiv=] should be regarded
       as syntactical elements on a par with [ x* n], which is not an RE bracket expression.

       The standard developers will consider changes to tr that allow it to translate  characters  between  different  character
       encodings, or they will consider providing a new utility to accomplish this.

       On historical System V systems, a range expression requires enclosing square-brackets, such as:


              tr '[a-z]' '[A-Z]'

       However, BSD-based systems did not require the brackets, and this convention is used here to avoid breaking large numbers
       of BSD scripts:


              tr a-z A-Z

       The preceding System V script will continue to work because the brackets, treated as regular characters,  are  translated
       to themselves. However, any System V script that relied on "a-z" representing the three characters 'a', '-', and 'z' have
       to be rewritten as "az-" .

       The ISO POSIX-2:1993 standard had a -c option that behaved similarly to the -C option, but did not  supply  functionality
       equivalent  to  the  -c  option  specified in IEEE Std 1003.1-2001.  This meant that historical practice of being able to
       specify tr -d\200-\377 (which would delete all bytes with the top bit set) would have no effect because, in the C locale,
       bytes with the values octal 200 to octal 377 are not characters.

       The  earlier  version  also said that octal sequences referred to collating elements and could be placed adjacent to each
       other to specify multi-byte characters. However, it was noted that this caused ambiguities because tr would not  be  able
       to  tell whether adjacent octal sequences were intending to specify multi-byte characters or multiple single byte charac-
       ters.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 specifies that octal sequences always refer to single byte binary values.

FUTURE DIRECTIONS
       None.

SEE ALSO
       sed

COPYRIGHT
       Portions of this text are reprinted and reproduced in electronic form from IEEE Std 1003.1, 2003  Edition,  Standard  for
       Information  Technology -- Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX), The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 6, Copy-
       right (C) 2001-2003 by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc and The Open Group. In the event of any
       discrepancy  between this version and the original IEEE and The Open Group Standard, the original IEEE and The Open Group
       Standard  is  the  referee   document.   The   original   Standard   can   be   obtained   online   at   http://www.open-
       group.org/unix/online.html .



IEEE/The Open Group                                           2003                                                        TR(1P)

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