Sed
sed is a stream editor. A stream editor is used to perform basic text transformations on an input stream (a file or input from a pipeline). While in some ways similar to an editor which permits scripted edits (such as ed), sed works by making only one pass over the input(s), and is consequently more efficient. But it is sed's ability to filter text in a pipeline which particularly distinguishes it from other types of editors.
Using sed
Sed can remove all instances of foo with bar with the following.
cat report.txt | sed 's/foo/bar/g' > report_new.txt
This removed all lines containing "loopback" from FILENAME and outputs into newfile.txt
sed '/loopback/d' ./FILENAME > newfile.txt
This will remove empty spaces from FILENAME.
cat FILENAME | sed '/^$/d;s/blank://g'
This will append "BAR" to the end of every line in testfile3 and output to file testfile4
sed 's/$/"BAR/' testfile3 > testfile4
Show only lines 12-18 of file.txt
sed -n 12,18p file.txt
Show all of file.txt except for lines from 12 to 18
sed 12,18d file.txt
Double-space file.txt
sed G file.txt
Print only lines with three consecutive digits
sed '/[0-9]\{3\}/p' file.txt
Delete all spaces in front of every line of file.txt
sed 's/^[ ^t]*//' file.txt
Delete all spaces at the end of every line of file.txt
sed 's/[ ^t]*$//' file.txt
Delete all spaces in front and at the end of every line of file.txt
sed 's/^[ ^t]*//;s/[ ^]*$//' file.txt
If a line contains baz, substitute foo with bar
sed '/baz/s/foo/bar/g' file.txt
Remove ":" from end of a line:
sed 's/:$//'