Thanks for the time and idea.

Played with it but unfortunately I'm not skilled with sed and I
should need further help or reference to solve the quiz.

Drilling into details the content of text.txt appears to be processed
as list of commands although I firstly produced the file on the fly.  

-Dan


Manuel Solis <lossoli...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hello Dan,
> 
> Perhaps one simple solution would be using sed(1),
> 
> Suppose you have a file named 'test.txt' and the list you provided is
> there,you could 
> run in shell:
> 
> <code> sed 's/celere.com/elettronica.lol/p' test.txt > results.txt
> </code>
> 
> Hope this helps you
> 
> Manuel
> 
> El vie, 4 oct 2024 a las 10:39, Dan (<d...@nnnne-o-o-o.com>) escribió:
> 
> > Hello,
> >
> > About *shelling*, I found two useful tricks to edit the filesystem.
> >
> > To speed up editing on folder file list:
> > nano *.xml (CTRL+S, CTRL+X)
> >
> > Recursively into subdirs:
> > nano `find . -name *.xml` (CTRL+S, CTRL+X)
> >
> > The problem comes when given a filesystem structure like:
> >
> > xml1/email/po...@celere.com
> > xml2/email/po...@celere.com
> > xml3/email/po...@celere.com
> > xml4/email/po...@celere.com
> > xml5/email/po...@celere.com
> > xml6/email/po...@celere.com
> > xml7/email/po...@celere.com
> >
> > I want to rename with one unique shell commmand all the wrong
> > emails to po...@elettronica.lol
> >
> > Do you have a tip to exchange?
> >
> > Thanks!
> >
> > -Dan
> >
> >
> 

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