or in one line:
perl -pe 's/\t/\\t/g' infile > outfile
to allow for more substitutions consider a hash like
my %mapping = ( # or whatever you like to display
"\t" => '\t',
"\n" => '\n',
" " => '_',
);
my $pattern = qr/([@{[join '', keys %mapping]}])/;
while ( <> ) {
s/$pattern/$mapping{$1}/g;
print "$_\n"; # you still want to start a new line
}
This works fine as long as your keys are only characters, otherwise you have to use an alternation instead of a character class.
-- Hofmator
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