Update: The following solutions are not generally robust, although they do work in the OP's specific use case; see the bottom section for a robust, awk-based solution.
To summarize the options (interestingly, they all perform about the same):
tr:
devnull's solution (provided in a comment on the question) is the simplest:
tr '\t' ',' < file.tsv > file.csv
sed:
The OP's own sed solution is perfectly fine, given that the input contains no quoted strings (with potentially embedded \t chars.):
sed 's/\t/,/g' file.tsv > file.csv
The only caveat is that on some platforms (e.g., macOS) the escape sequence \t is not supported, so a literal tab char. must be spliced into the command string using ANSI quoting ($'\t'):
sed 's/'$'\t''/,/g' file.tsv > file.csv
awk:
The caveat with awk is that FS - the input field separator - must be set to \t explicitly - the default behavior would otherwise strip leading and trailing tabs and replace interior spans of multiple tabs with only a single ,:
awk 'BEGIN { FS="\t"; OFS="," } {$1=$1; print}' file.tsv > file.csv
Note that simply assigning $1 to itself causes awk to rebuild the input line using OFS - the output field separator; this effectively replaces all \t chars. with , chars. print then simply prints the rebuilt line.
Robust awk solution:
As A. Rabus points out, the above solutions do not handle unquoted input fields that themselves contain , characters correctly - you'll end up with extra CSV fields.
The following awk solution fixes this, by enclosing such fields in "..." on demand (see the non-robust awk solution above for a partial explanation of the approach).
If such fields also have embedded " chars., these are escaped as "", in line with RFC 4180.Thanks, Wyatt Israel.
awk 'BEGIN { FS="\t"; OFS="," } {
rebuilt=0
for(i=1; i<=NF; ++i) {
if ($i ~ /,/ && $i !~ /^".*"$/) {
gsub("\"", "\"\"", $i)
$i = "\"" $i "\""
rebuilt=1
}
}
if (!rebuilt) { $1=$1 }
print
}' file.tsv > file.csv
$i ~ /[,"]/ && $i !~ /^".*"$/ detects any field that contains , and/or " and isn't already enclosed in double quotes
gsub("\"", "\"\"", $i) escapes embedded " chars. by doubling them
$i = "\"" $i "\"" updates the result by enclosing it in double quotes
As stated before, updating any field causes awk to rebuild the line from the fields with the OFS value, i.e., , in this case, which amounts to the effective TSV -> CSV conversion; flag rebuilt is used to ensure that each input record is rebuilt at least once.