# Output Only Lines Involved In A Substitution When you run a basic `sed` command, it will _autoprint_ the pattern space (a line of input) once it is done running the script against it. That means every line will get sent to stdout. You can supress the autoprint functionality with the `-n` flag like so: ```bash $ seq 100 | sed -n 's/1$/one/' ``` You can then add the `p` flag to the end of the substitute command to tell it to _print_ any line that was affected by that substitution after the substitution has been applied. ```bash $ seq 100 | sed -n 's/1$/one/p' one 1one 2one 3one 4one 5one 6one 7one 8one 9one ``` For all numbers between 1 and 100, this matches those that end in `1` and substitutes that `1` for `one`. And then it is only those lines that go to stdout. If you used the `p` flag without `-n`, every line would autoprint and then you'd get duplicate output for each line that had a substitution. See `man sed` for more details.